Pitch production during the Roman period: an intensive mountain industry for a globalised economy?

The authors’ research project in the Pyrenees mountains has located and excavated Roman kilns for producing pitch from pine resin. Their investigations reveal a whole sustainable industry, integrated into the local environmental cycle, supplying pitch to the Roman network and charcoal as a spin-off...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Orengo, Hèctor A., Palet Martínez, Josep M., Ejarque, Ana, Miras, Yannick, Riera-Mora, Santiago
Format: Article
Published: Antiquity Publications 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/2135/
Description
Summary:The authors’ research project in the Pyrenees mountains has located and excavated Roman kilns for producing pitch from pine resin. Their investigations reveal a whole sustainable industry, integrated into the local environmental cycle, supplying pitch to the Roman network and charcoal as a spin-off to the local iron extractors. The paper makes a strong case for applying combined archaeological and palaeoenvironmental investigations in upland areas, showing mountain industries to have been not so much marginal and pastoral as key players in the economy of the Roman period and beyond it into the seventh century AD.