Phytolith evidence of water management for rice growing and processing between 8,500 and 7,500 cal years bp in the middle Huai river valley, China
Autor: | Huiyuan Gan, Yuzhang Yang, Chunguang Gu, Chengqing Huang, Wuhong Luo, Lina Zhuang, Juzhong Zhang, Liugeng Lin |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
010506 paleontology
Archeology geography geography.geographical_feature_category 060102 archaeology Glume Paleontology Wetland 06 humanities and the arts Plant Science Straw Biology 01 natural sciences Bulliform cell Agronomy Phytolith Paddy field 0601 history and archaeology Arable land Weed 0105 earth and related environmental sciences |
Zdroj: | Vegetation History and Archaeobotany. 30:243-254 |
ISSN: | 1617-6278 0939-6314 |
Popis: | The archaeological sites of Shunshanji and Hanjing are recorded as the earliest Neolithic sites in the middle Huai river valley, China, which were occupied between 8,500 and 7,500 cal bp, and provide crucial evidence of rice growing. However, the water availability and management of arable land systems for rice cultivation and the main stages of rice processing at the two sites have not been studied before. In this paper, phytolith analyses are discussed in 66 samples from the Shunshanji site and 32 samples from the Hanjing site, with three phases of occupation at each. The ratios of sensitive to fixed forms in the phytolith assemblages over three phases reveal that in Phase I these ratios are relatively low, and they become significantly higher in Phases II and III at both sites. These results suggest that rice was grown probably only using natural water supplies in the lowlands during Phase I, but changed to growing on highly controlled and regularly flooded and drained wetlands in Phase II at the two sites. In addition, seen from the distribution and concentrations of phytoliths from rice, weeds and their by-products, as well as the proportions of each, both double peaked glume cells (DPG) and rice cuneiform bulliform cells (RCB) were found together with some rice paddy weed phytoliths. The concentrations of DPG were much higher than those of RCB in most samples from the Shunshanji and Hanjing sites over the three phases. The findings imply that rice ears together with the stems and leaves were probably stored after the harvest, then threshed and de-husked simultaneously, and the straw and chaff by-products were discarded together at the sites between 8,500 and 7,500 cal bp. The study in this paper aims towards a better understanding of past human behaviour and social organization in rice growing communities during the middle Neolithic in eastern China. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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