Changing patterns of plant-based food production during the Neolithic and early Bronze Age in central-south Inner Mongolia, China: An interdisciplinary approach
Liu Li Chen Xingcan Zhao Hao · 2015
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期刊名称:
Quaternary International   2015 年
发表日期:
2015
摘要:
This paper examines the long-term change of plant use from the Neolithic to the early Bronze Age (ca. 4800-1000BC) in central-south Inner Mongolia to reconstruct the transitional process from foraging and low-level food production to agriculture. We employed an interdisciplinary approach, including starch analysis, phytolith analysis, and usewear analysis, correlated to changes in tool types used over time. The results show that this region experienced several waves of social transformations resulting from a combination of local social development, interactions with surrounding regions, and changing climatic conditions. The initial Neolithic development was a result of population expansions from the Central Plain, which introduced domesticated millets and arguably Job's tears to the region. However, cereal-based farming before 3500BC appears to have been rather insignificant in the economy. Instead, it appears that various underground storage organs (USOs), wild or cultivated, including yams, lily bulbs, snake gourd roots, and occasionally cattail rhizomes, were staple foods. By ca. 3500-3000BC, subsistence favoring USOs began to give way to cereal-based farming as millets and Job's tears became a more important source of starchy foods. This shift was parallel with a rapid population increase in the region and may be related in part to the need for additional high-calorie foods as would be provided by cereals. During the late Neolithic and the early Bronze Age (ca. 2500-1000BC), cereal farming appears to have become a dominant starch-based subsistence strategy. In addition to millets and Job's tears, wheat and/or barley may have been introduced to the region. The population in this region may have played a crucial role for the introduction of wheat and/or barley from the steppes to China.
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