Willem van Zeist

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The earliest cultivated Emmer Wheat from Tell Aswad was analyzed by Willem van Zeist

Willem van Zeist (born 1924 in Apeldoorn) is an Archaeologist, Palynologist and Professor of Paleobotany. He was the Director of the Biologisch-Archaeologisch Instituut, Rijksuniversiteit of the University of Groningen in the Netherlands.[1]

Biography

Van Zeist studied biology at the University of Utrecht, completing his PhD dissertation in 1955 on pollen analysis investigation in the Netherlands, with special reference to archaeology (Acta Botanica Neerlandica 4, 1955).[2] From 1951-1989 he was linked to the Biologisch-Archaeologisch Instituut (Biological-Archaeological Institute). In 1967 he became lecturer and in 1973 associate professor of Palaeobotany at the University of Groningen.

European research

Van Zeist conducted important research in Europe on the oldest recovered canoe in the world, the Pesse canoe[3] found in the Netherlands.[4] According to C14 dating analysis it was found to be constructed somewhere between 8200 and 7600 BC.[4] This canoe is exhibited in the Drents Museum in Assen, Netherlands.

Van Zeist studied the vegetational history and peat bogs of southeastern Drenthe and concluded that Neolithic settlements had begun there around 5000 BC. He also concluded that the prehistoric disc wheels found in the Netherlands dated to at least the Neolithic period.[5] Van Zeist also conducted analytical studies of pollen cores and charred seeds and fruits from archaeological excavations at Gasselte, Noordbarge, Odoorn, Peelo and Wijster. Since 1983, he has been a member of The Royal Dutch Academy of Sciences.[6][7]

Near East research

In 1975, van Zeist began work on establishing the climatalogical record for the Near East with pollen analyses from Iran and Turkey. Along with other studies he concluded that there had only been relatively minor fluctuations in the climate of this area since 5500 BC.[8] He conducted paleobotanical studies and dating analyses at various Near Eastern archaeological sites of key importance such as Tell Ramad, Tell Ghoraife, El Kowm, Ras Shamra, Cayonu, Ganj Dareh, Mureybet and Tell Aswad. At the latter site near Mount Hermon in Syria, he made a notable find of the earliest cultivated Emmer Wheat yet found anywhere on Earth to date, along with what he considered to be domesticated peas and lentils along with other grains such as einkorn and barley at later stages.[9]

Selected bibliography

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References

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  9. Miller, Naomi F. The Origins of Plant Cultivation in the Near East, in The Origins of Agriculture: An international perspective, edited by C. Wesley Cowan, Patty Jo Watson, Nancy L. Benco. University of Alabama Press, 2006. P. 48.