Sedentism and plant cultivation in northeast China emerged during affluent conditions

The reasons and processes that led hunter-gatherers to transition into a sedentary and agricultural way of life are a fundamental unresolved question of human history. Here we present results of excavations of two single-occupation early Neolithic sites (dated to 7.9 and 7.4 ka) and two high-resolut...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2019-07, Vol.14 (7), p.e0218751-e0218751
Hauptverfasser: Shelach-Lavi, Gideon, Teng, Mingyu, Goldsmith, Yonaton, Wachtel, Ido, Stevens, Chris J, Marder, Ofer, Wan, Xiongfei, Wu, Xiaohong, Tu, Dongdong, Shavit, Roi, Polissar, Pratigya, Xu, Hai, Fuller, Dorian Q
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container_title PloS one
container_volume 14
creator Shelach-Lavi, Gideon
Teng, Mingyu
Goldsmith, Yonaton
Wachtel, Ido
Stevens, Chris J
Marder, Ofer
Wan, Xiongfei
Wu, Xiaohong
Tu, Dongdong
Shavit, Roi
Polissar, Pratigya
Xu, Hai
Fuller, Dorian Q
description The reasons and processes that led hunter-gatherers to transition into a sedentary and agricultural way of life are a fundamental unresolved question of human history. Here we present results of excavations of two single-occupation early Neolithic sites (dated to 7.9 and 7.4 ka) and two high-resolution archaeological surveys in northeast China, which capture the earliest stages of sedentism and millet cultivation in the second oldest center of domestication in the Old World. The transition to sedentism coincided with a significant transition to wetter conditions in north China, at 8.1-7.9 ka. We suggest that these wetter conditions were an empirical precondition that facilitated the complex transitional process to sedentism and eventually millet domestication in north China. Interestingly, sedentism and plant domestication followed different trajectories. The sedentary way of life and cultural norms evolved rapidly, within a few hundred years, we find complex sedentary villages inhabiting the landscape. However, the process of plant domestication, progressed slowly over several millennia. Our earliest evidence for the beginning of the domestication process appear in the context of an already complex sedentary village (late Xinglongwa culture), a half millennia after the onset of cultivation, and even in this phase domesticated plants and animals were rare, suggesting that the transition to domesticated (sensu stricto) plants in affluent areas might have not played a substantial role in the transition to sedentary societies.
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subjects Agriculture - history
Animals
Archaeology
Archaeology - history
Asian studies
Behavior
Biblical studies
Biology and Life Sciences
China
Collaboration
Crops, Agricultural - history
Cultivation
Cultivation (Land)
Culture
Domestication
Earth
Earth Sciences
Edible Grain - history
Environmental aspects
Grain cultivation
History
History, Ancient
Humans
Hunting and gathering societies
Hypotheses
Landscape
Millet
Millets - growth & development
Neolithic
Norms
People and Places
Physical fitness
Sedentarization
Social Sciences
Stone Age
title Sedentism and plant cultivation in northeast China emerged during affluent conditions
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