6533b828fe1ef96bd128841d

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Long-distance trade and consumption of mollusks in the Byzantine and Early Islamic periods in the Negev Desert

Sina LehnigYotam TepperInbar KtalavGil GambashGil GambashGuy Bar-oz

subject

Donax trunculus010506 paleontologyArcheologyLambis truncata060102 archaeologySouthern Levantbiology06 humanities and the artsMusselbiology.organism_classification01 natural sciencesConchFisheryMediterranean seaGeographyHabitat0601 history and archaeology14. Life underwaterShellfish0105 earth and related environmental sciences

description

Abstract Recent archaeological excavations in the Negev desert in the southern Levant have yielded a variety of mollusk shells originating from the Mediterranean Sea, the Nile River, and the Red Sea, uncovered in the trash mounds and settlements of Byzantine and Early Islamic sites. These remains indicate that aquatic products were among the merchandised comestibles transported across long distances. Three shellfish taxa manifest such transportation: (1) the small clam, Donax trunculus, commonly found in the exposed sandy wash zones of the Eastern Mediterranean coast; (2) the large freshwater mussel, Chambardia rubens, whose habitat stretches from the Nile River to western Africa; and (3) the large conch, Lambis truncata, commonly found in the shallow waters of the Red Sea. The breakage and abrasion patterns of the shell fragments of these three species suggest that they were collected as live specimens and not as empty shells washed ashore. The other taxa, however, were mostly collected as empty shells to be used, for example, as ornaments.

10.1016/j.jasrep.2021.102927http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jasrep.2021.102927