 Well, now we went to present here the first results of a data analysis about this issue that is the reconstruction of the possibility of reconstruction late in Roman wine economy using an engine-based model between the first century BC and the third century AD. This is a project that is developing inside the EDNET Economic and Political Network project and European U.S.T. project. Okay, first we make a situation about the context of the different issues related with the late time in Roman wine. This is the territorial scope with the modern shares of the administrative. The area in red is the territorial scope we want to study. Then here we are the regiolietania with the Latin-topinemical teams and main roles in Roman times, structurally between the cities of the colony of Arcino, the Roman municipium of Vettolo, Iludo and Blende on the coast, and secondary sediments inside the land of the late time region. The preliminary considerations on the ecological issues that we have to take in account is that we think that it is a matter of intensive viticulture that supports a huge socioeconomic impact in the region. The regional variability supposes changes in rural and urban settlement patterns. Just spatial analysis, we are making a huge spatial analysis in different territorial scales, macro-spatials in regio, mesospatial in the territory of the cities and the secondary sediments. This also refers to the sites, to the archaeological sites, to Arcularia and Higheina. The demographic analysis is the other issue very important to try to understand the dependency of the population level and the dependency in the supply chain of the production of Roman wine. All these studies we make in the three scholars also. But in this presentation we are focused in the geoeconomic studies, in the economic and economic models, about the inter-regional and regional relationships in different spatial sources. The wine-growing system dynamics, we think that it is an evolution that it starts with the architecture of the Roman villa system that supposes, perhaps, a self-construction and autartical system for maintenance of the territory and the property. Then this evolves to wine-growing identification and specialization process in these chronologies. And then this evolves, again, in a specialization process with a resonance due to the competence of the other productors in the Western Roman Empire. Finally, the last period is the wine-growing decline of abandonment that is upside in the final chronological period we are studying. Operational objective, this is the operational objective to make an inventorying catalogue of wine-growing, pottery and archaeological dataset to try to identify possible geospatial models of the pathos, land use, tenure, et cetera, characterize types of arranged elements and productive structures to try to identify economic dynamics and timeline evolution, establish conceptual geo-economic models, to try to develop predictive, regressive and reconstructive models of viticultural, pottery and crafting activities, develop micro-economic studies about wine-growing crops, wine-making yields, and for productivity, to try to establish econometric parameters of cost, prices, benefits, et cetera. But this presentation is focused in the last point that is developed ABM, GMBAS Model Comparative Timeline Analysis in three levels, Apolligene in the production centers, intransito, referring to the trade, and a destinone inconstantion. We make a little bit of a comparison between these uses. This is for to confine our efforts on working on operative hypotheses. Our working hypothesis is based in the studies of the last decades about amphoraic presencing in later in the region and the exportation overseas. This is the different forms that are usually in the region and this is the main four forms of amphorae that make it in this region and the last two ones are the most who are exported overseas. The working hypothesis is based in different phases about the production and the distribution of Roman wine amphoraes. The first facet is in section that is characterized by the imitation of the Italian wine amphoraes Reco-Italic, Andresel 1, 1A, 1B, 1C, Citerio. The facet 2, we named it like Groud because it is the first amphora local forms period exported basically to Gallia, Germania, and Pitaña Limbs markets. It is the Tereconensulae Italian I and the Pasqual I. The facet 3 is the radioindation as we named the second amphora period with Gallia in bulk that is exported mainly to Italian markets and especially to the city of Rome itself. It is about the amphora forms, the rest of the Tereconensulae and the Gallia in tanker ships. The facet 4 is the peak about the low production of amphorae. The decline is very, very fast and the big containers and we think that is due to the reorientation of the packing of the wine in Kupai with the barrels for supply drops and large markets and Kulei when it is coming for supply local or regional markets. The last facet is the decline. It is a sudden fall of the Italian wine production and it implies to return to local and regional subconception. We can see here the different pictures about the different processes that I speak before and this is about the investment in wine making pottery and facilities. We can see here a reconstruction of Verrldeva and Mora in Teyama and Rosalona about the facilities to wine making. We can see here the Calabinera colloquial parterpullaria from the second century in situ restitution about the studies making before. The Roman bill of the Pondetrae digna and lasagrera here in the plain of Barcelona, the restitution of the first facet in the faeci of the intensification and then this is the facet of the specialization. It is a huge investment to facilities for wine making that we are detected in this area. The other side, the other investment is about the wine making pottery facilities for making the amphora. Then we can see here an example about the Franquils near Verrldeva and Alona in the Fradena. Here we are in the process of the excavation of this psychological site and then we make here the Roman settlements we have to take to make our first analysis of that to make the future Asian Basin model developed. We are concentrating in the central area of this red circle and this is about wine making production centers concentrated in the in the center of the Laetanian region and this is the concentration of kilns and piliina in this you can see here 87 wine grabbing settlements, 48 real presses documented and 171 presses estimated. Here you are total gadgets 45 pottery workshops, 49 real kind documented and 68 kilns estimated. This is important. This is the different types of settlements we have identified in this territory, a small establishment of about 400 and 500 meters square meters. With these issues, simple special organization, one calcatoria, one wine press, five to $10, integrated into Mediocytes Villa on the Euribus Dam, etc. The Median Stibulus with these issues and 1,200 meters and the big establishment with these sizes and these basically is just inside it. Well we have distinguished four study areas we are here. The first study area is the Barcelona-Hinterland and playing the upper pastelonensis that we have at Centureteo, that makes easy the calculation of these future gels and other factors. Then the second study area, the lower Yobrega, the Ricatines Tuari, you can see here is near the Yobrega river. The central coast with these huge population settlements and inland by just in plain with the territory of our own Algarna and Acuaguay Calidae. Well the basics about the Asian Basics Modelling Study, the basic statistics and probably the stagnant is the part that Ithar Romanoska and the Osterland Supercomputing Center have developed. We try to answer two main questions. Iroen-Grawing and Pottery Productive Dynamics, Good Proxies for Establishing and Evolutive Comparative Asian Basics Modelling Timeline Study. And then we make the other question that is, is Asian Basics Modelling a good tool for confirming or forcing or working on operative hypothesis? This is the questions and this is the process. We can see the Basics Modelling, we make three analytical perspectives, production, some product dynamics at Origine in the production center, trade, shipwrecks in Transito, about the shipwrecks making, the study of making about this, and the Concentration of Foreign Services at Destinon. And then we have some questions and some reference about the producers use available lands to grow grapes, vending and shortages, sell locally for a surplus cash, buy more land to increase productivity, invest in facilities to increase the rentability, and then the influence of different catastrophic events that rags, diseases, prices fluctuations, competition outside, and the competitive wine for Angalia and for Africa. This is the Asian Basics Modelling study about the cumulative probabilities in wine press. It is a accumulation of the probabilities, if not correct me, in one year and a different year, the probability that wine press A existed in any one year, and then wine press that in different sequence during the timeline. The cumulative probability is to compare the different presents or not presents the presses in the AOB. This is for remain the concentration of the region, and this is the analysis of the data, we can see here the different issues that we make about the archaeological sites, the situation, the number of the presses documented in each site, and the estimated presses and then the chronology for make the timeline. We have wine production center, total subjects 87, wine grabbing segments, total real presses 49, and total estimated presses 172. This is the picture about the analysis of the presence or not presence of presses during the timeline. You can see here the evolution over the time between the 1st century BC to the 4th century AD, and you can see here in different study areas I speak before. Then the same for the kilns, about 45 water warships, the total real kilns are 49, and the total estimated queen is 60, 80. The same about the graphics in the evolution, we can see here the sudden low of the production of amphoraeque at the end of the 1st century AD, and you can see here, and then the comparative between the presses and the kilns. You can see here the production of wine making is continued, and the production of amphoraeques. Here is the analytical about the different evolution of originates, you can see here, and this is the comparative with a study of Parker in 1992. You can see here the comparison that the graphics is similar and the peaks are similar. You can see here about the comparative timeline production and trade evolution here. In Parker, when you scale all the study, you can see that the line and the behavior of the line is the same. The same for at the Stenon, the peaks in Austria about the Hispanic amphoraeque, and then the conclusions, only one minute please, is that changes in rural and urban settlements pattern reflected in change in our annual situation systems, it seems it's possible to reconstruct viticulture productive units as types and its production capacity in actual terms, and it's possible to reconstruct the rural oneness interests, strategies, and behaviors in different categories. We can analyze the scope of a Laetitian wine economy in its specific timeline evolution over the time. The balance between intra-regional and extra-regional wine production and trade conception in a given area is a good way to explore this issue. It's possible to establish a General Agenda Ambassador model, we think, a study that allows us for a further economical research in wine production and trade uses. It could be possible to apply then this model, we think, in other territories. Thank you very much.