Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Personal tools

You are here: Home / Library / RBINS Staff Publications 2022 / The Environment and its Exploitation Along the Lower Scheldt River During the Roman Period (Wichelen, Belgium – Late 1st to 3rd Centuries AD)

E. Meylemans, J. Bastiaens, F. Bogemans, T. Clerbaut, S. Debruyne, K. Deforce, A. Ervynck, A. Lentacker, Y. Perdaen, A. Storme, N. Vanholme, and W. Van Neer (2022)

The Environment and its Exploitation Along the Lower Scheldt River During the Roman Period (Wichelen, Belgium – Late 1st to 3rd Centuries AD)

Environmental Archaeology:1--19.

The large number of rural Roman settlements known from the Low Countries is generally characterised by a poor preservation of ecological proxies due to the absence of waterlogged contexts. The riverside site of Wijmeers (Wichelen, Belgium), a small rural settlement located in the Lower Scheldt basin, represents a rare exception to this pattern. Due to the presence of a waterlogged sequence with Roman (late 1st–3rd centuries AD) waste layers, located only a few metres from a main building structure, and the covering of the site with alluvial sediments shortly after its abandonment, the preservation condition of charred and uncharred organic materials was exceptional. The combined study of these proxies (pollen, seeds, charcoal, mollusc shells and animal bones) presents unique insights into the subsistence economy of a Roman rural household in the Lower Scheldt valley in general, and especially its exploitation of the valley and river environments. Besides this cultural–economical perspective, the site provides key information for understanding the chronology of fluvial and alluvial processes in the Lower Scheldt Basin for a large part of the Subatlantic period (Iron Age to Early Middle Ages, ca 800 BC–900 AD).
PDF available, Open Access, Impact Factor, Peer Review, International Redaction Board
Sandy flanders; Roman, agriculture; riverine ecology;, geomorphology; wetland, archaeology; subsistence, strategies
  • DOI: 10.1080/14614103.2022.2108305
  • ISSN: 1461-4103