The successful candidate will be part of a newly established research group working to address the unanswered questions regarding early agro-diversity. The successful candidate will use and develop well-established soil science, innovative bio-geoarchaeological profiling, and novel dating methods. The project investigate where, when and how gardening began in Northern Europe by focusing on the soil in the most common, but least understood and most varied traces of prehistory: pits. By combining environmental and human science we will chart the development and resilience of small-scale agro-diversity from the very start of the Holocene until the medieval gardens, and use the resulting long-term record to inform global debates on food security.
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