Stable isotope analyses ( δ 15 N, δ 34 S, δ 13 C) locate early rye cultivation in northern Europe within diverse manuring practices
DOI:
10.1098/rstb.2024.0195
Publication Date:
2025-05-15T07:04:12Z
AUTHORS (7)
ABSTRACT
Stable isotopes provide insights into the early history of rye cultivation from the Migration period to the late Medieval period (fourth to fifteenth centuries CE). Manuring shows high intensity and diversity throughout. Rye as an undemanding crop resistant to drought was cultivated on nutrient-poor sandy soils to a limited extent only. It became a dominant crop owing to its integration into an existing labour-intensive manuring system mainly based on stable dung. Modern experiments demonstrate that the effect of manuring on cereal
δ
15
N is strongly mediated by the soil substrate. Conspicuously low
δ
34
S values can indicate additional manuring with peat. The Δ
13
C values suggest that the best harvests were achieved on dwelling mounds close to the sea and that relatively poor harvests resulted on fields on dry, sandy soils. Because the mounds were flooded with salt water during winter storm surges, the crop cultivated there might have been summer rye. Winter rye became the dominant crop in Germany around 1000 CE and continued to be until the mid-twentieth century. Intensive manuring allowed for high yields, which facilitated the emergence of village communities and towns and stable political and religious power systems.
This article is part of the theme issue ‘Unravelling domestication: multi-disciplinary perspectives on human and non-human relationships in the past, present and future’.
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