Claudia Moricca

Pubblicazioni

Titolo Pubblicato in Anno
One Man’s Trash Is Someone Else’s Treasure: Plant Remains From The Tomb Of The Pharaoh Tutankhamun 10th International Workshop for African Archaeobotany In Paris, France 2023
Evaluation of the efficacy of micro-magnetic resonance Imaging compared with light microscopy to investigate the anatomy of modern and ancient waterlogged wood MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING 2023
Carpological analysis of a Roman well at the site of Alba Fucens (Abruzzi, Italy) 118° Congresso della Società Botanica Italiana - IX International Plant Science Conference 2023
Human-environment interactions at the central Mediterranean site of Motya (Sicily, Italy) XXI Congress: Time for Change - Book of Abstracts 2023
The first extensive study of an Imperial Roman Garden in the city of Rome: the Horti Lamiani VEGETATION HISTORY AND ARCHAEOBOTANY 2023
The high potential of micro-magnetic resonance imaging for the identification of archaeological reeds. The case study of Tutankhamun HERITAGE 2023
Study and Analysis of Plant remains from the tomb of Tutankhamun 19th Conference of the International Workgroup for Palaeoethnobotany 2022
Nannorrhops ritchiana: the dwarf palm tree of the king in the 24th-23rd century BC palace of Jericho 19th Conference of the International Workgroup for Palaeoethnobotany 2022
Motya through the millenia: Analyzing Phoenician impact on the local vegetation 19th Conference of the International Workgroup for Palaeoethnobotany 2022
Prime attestazioni di specie del Nuovo Mondo all’interno del complesso dei Santi Quattro Coronati (Roma, Italia) - First attestations of New World species inside the Santi Quattro Coronati complex (Rome, Italy) Atti del II Convegno Annuale Distretto Tecnologico per i Beni e le Attività Culturali della Regione Lazio. Centro di Eccellenza. 4 Novembre 2021. 2022
Archeobotanica e Bioantropologia: le potenzialità della VR e della stampa 3D nella valorizzazione di resti organici Book of abstracts. Unaquantum 2022 Tecnologie Open-Source per la gestione dei beni, delle attività culturali e del turismo. 2022
Archaeological excavations in Jerusalem, Holy Sepulchre. A preliminary report LIBER ANNUUS 2022
Elite Food Between the Late Middle Ages and Renaissance: Some Case Studies from Latium ENVIRONMENTAL ARCHAEOLOGY 2021
Grapes and vines of the Phoenicians: morphometric analyses of pips from modern varieties and Iron Age archaeological sites in the Western Mediterranean JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL SCIENCE: REPORTS 2021
Cultural landscape and plant use at the Phoenician site of Motya (Western Sicily, Italy) inferred from a disposal pit VEGETATION HISTORY AND ARCHAEOBOTANY 2021
Sacred and secular aspects of Phoenicians' life at Motya (Sicily, Italy) inferred by multidisciplinary archaeobotanical analyses RENDICONTI ONLINE DELLA SOCIETÀ GEOLOGICA ITALIANA 2021
New species from the New World: early archaeobotanical and archaeozoological evidence from the Santi Quattro Coronati complex in Rome (Italy) 116° Congresso della Società Botanica Italiana 2021
Beech and stone Pine, the Italian landscape modelled by valuable ritual trees 116° Congresso della Società Botanica Italiana 2021
Prime attestazioni di specie del Nuovo Mondo a Roma nel complesso dei Santi Quattro Coronati 2° convegno annuale centro di eccellenza DTC LAZIO 2021
ARCHAEOBOTANICAL ANALYSIS OF A PHOENICIAN DISPOSAL PIT: A TOOL TO RECONSTRUCT PAST LANDSCAPE Abstract Book of the Conference Science Applications Becoming Culture 2020

ERC

  • PE10_6
  • SH6_3

KET

  • Life-science technologies & biotechnologies

Interessi di ricerca

I have recently completed with merits a PhD in Earth Sciences, curriculum Environment and Cultural Heritage at Sapienza University of Rome (Italy) with a thesis titled “Palaeoenvironmental reconstruction of a Phoenician site: archaeobotany at Motya (Sicily, Italy)” under the supervision of Prof. Laura Sadori and Prof. Lorenzo Nigro. My project concerned the archaeobotanical analysis of materials found in the archaeological site of Motya, a small island (ca. 40 ha) located in the Stagnone di Marsala, a coastal lagoon of western Sicily. Due to its strategic, harbored position in the middle of the Mediterranean and the presence of fresh-water springs, the site was chosen by Phoenicians as a settlement in the 8th century BC until the siege of Motya in 397/6 BC. I focused on the analysis of two closed contexts: a votive deposit near the Temple of Melqart/Herakles, and a disposal pit in the area were the first Phoenician settlement is believed to have been found. My research involved a series of activities, including sampling, on-site flotation, separation, identification, and interpretation of plant remains. Whilst my main focus were macro-remains (both carpological and anthracological), I also performed palynological analyses of samples collected from the disposal pit, which provided complementary information. Finally, I spend a research period at the University of Montpellier (France) under the supervision of Dr. Laurent Bouby, to perform morphometric analyses of charred grape pips from Motya and compare them with pips collected in other Western Mediterranean sites and a modern reference collection.
Whilst my PhD project focused on Iron Age materials, I have also had the opportunity to study archaeobotanical remains from the Early Bronze Age (EBA) site of Tell es-Sultan, located in the Jericho oasis. Among the charred remains, I managed to identify a round fruit as a drupe of Nannorrhops ritchiana (Griff.) Aitch. thanks to the combination of classical archaeobotanical techniques and a CT-scan. Its presence in the EBA palace suggests the existence of an overland commercial track to the south-east, across the desert of Saudi Arabia, which only recent excavations and other finds have revealed.
Finally, my research experience in the field of archaeobotany also involved the analysis of Early Modern Age materials recovered from the Santi Quattro Coronati complex in Rome (Italy).

Keywords

archaeobotany
Phoenicians
Central Mediterranean
anthracology
archaeophyte
neophytes

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