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Friday, March 23, 2018

Pigeons in the Byzantine-era Negev

OSTEOLOGY AND COPROLOGY: Haifa U. Reveals Role of Pigeons in Turning the Negev Green 1,500 Years Ago (JNi Media, The Jewish Press).
Pigeons played a central role some 1,500 years ago in transforming the Byzantine Negev into a flourishing garden, according to a new study conducted at the Zinman Institute of Archeology at the University of Haifa and published Wednesday in the journal PlosOne.

The study, which focused on the ancient settlements of Shivta and Sa’adon, found archaeological evidence that the Byzantines in the Negev did not raise their pigeons for food, but to fertilize the dry loess soil and making it more suitable for intensive agriculture.

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I noted another article that mentioned this research here. The same research group has been working on ancient gerbils in the Negev as well.

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