“…Excavations at the site since the 1950s have produced a wealth of archaeological material, including the furnishings of a major burial tumulus once thought to be the resting place of the historical King Midas, but now redated to c. 740 BCE, decades before his death (DeVries et al, 2003;Voigt, 2009;Young, 1981). Excavations between 1988-2002, under the direction of Voigt, instituted total recovery of faunal remains and extensive sampling of carbonized plant remains from a full variety of contexts spanning the entire occupation sequence of the site (Voigt, 1994(Voigt, , 2002(Voigt, , 2005Voigt et al, 1997;Voigt and Henrickson, 2000;Voigt and Young, 1999). More than 470 flotation samples (Marston, 2010;Miller, 2010) and 13,000 animal bones (Zeder and Arter, 1994) have been analyzed from these recent excavations and form an exemplary dataset for testing questions of long-term change in agricultural risk management practices.…”