The Emergence and Dispersion of the Eastern Mediterranean Fishing Village: Evidence from Submerged Neolithic Settlements off the Carmel Coast, Israel

Authors

  • Ehud Galili Israel Antiquities Authority
  • Baruch Rosen Israel Antiquities Authority
  • Avi Gopher Tel Aviv University
  • Liora Kolska-Horwitz Hebrew University Jerusalem

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v15i2.167

Keywords:

fishing, submerged settlements, Israel

Abstract

In this paper, we propose a model which predicts the timing, location and form of early eastern Mediterranean fishing villages. A submerged late 9th-7th millennium BP settlement off the Carmel coast of Israel is described and presented as a case study to consider the initial development of Mediterranean fishing villages which would have been based upon a combined agro-pastoral-marine economy. The unique development of water-well technology enabled late 9th millennium BP populations to occupy previously unsettled territories near the coastline and to exploit marine and terrestrial resources simultaneously. This complex economy enabled year-round occupation of settlements and a relatively secure subsistence, based on agriculture, animal husbandry and fishing, supplemented by hunting and foraging. During the subsequent Pottery Neolithic (PN) period, olive oil was added to the Mediterranean subsistence base, and on the verge of historical times the production of wine completed the formation of the traditional Mediterranean economy as it is known today.

Author Biographies

  • Ehud Galili, Israel Antiquities Authority
    Ehud is a marine archaeologist and Director of the Marine Archaeology Branch of the Israel Antiquities Authority.
  • Baruch Rosen, Israel Antiquities Authority
    Baruch is Lecturer at the Institute of Archaeology, Tel Aviv University, and at the Faculty of Agriculture, Hebrew University of Rehovot.
  • Avi Gopher, Tel Aviv University
    Avi Gopher is an archaeologist and fulltime professor at the Institute of Archaeology, Tel Aviv University.
  • Liora Kolska-Horwitz, Hebrew University Jerusalem
    Liora is a freelance archaeozoologist and associate curator of the zoology collection of mammals, Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Published

2003-03-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Galili, E., Rosen, B., Gopher, A., & Kolska-Horwitz, L. (2003). The Emergence and Dispersion of the Eastern Mediterranean Fishing Village: Evidence from Submerged Neolithic Settlements off the Carmel Coast, Israel. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology, 15(2), 167-198. https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v15i2.167