Early agriculture and crop transmission among Bronze Age mobile pastoralists of Central Eurasia

被引:209
作者
Spengler, Robert [1 ]
Frachetti, Michael [1 ]
Doumani, Paula [1 ]
Rouse, Lynne [1 ]
Cerasetti, Barbara [2 ]
Bullion, Elissa [1 ]
Mar'yashev, Alexei [3 ]
机构
[1] Washington Univ, Dept Anthropol, St Louis, MO 63130 USA
[2] Univ Bologna, Dipartimento Storia Culture Civilta, I-40124 Bologna, Italy
[3] Inst Archaeol, Alma Ata 050010, Kazakhstan
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Bronze Age; agriculture; pastoralism; Central Eurasia; archaeobotany; WHEAT; CHINA; SETTLEMENTS; SPREAD; ORIGIN;
D O I
10.1098/rspb.2013.3382
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Archaeological research in Central Eurasia is exposing unprecedented scales of trans-regional interaction and technology transfer between East Asia and southwest Asia deep into the prehistoric past. This article presents a new archaeobotanical analysis from pastoralist campsites in the mountain and desert regions of Central Eurasia that documents the oldest known evidence for domesticated grains and farming among seasonally mobile herders. Carbonized grains from the sites of Tasbas and Begash illustrate the first transmission of southwest Asian and East Asian domesticated grains into the mountains of Inner Asia in the early third millennium BC. By the middle second millennium BC, seasonal camps in the mountains and deserts illustrate that Eurasian herders incorporated the cultivation of millet, wheat, barley and legumes into their subsistence strategy. These findings push back the chronology for domesticated plant use among Central Eurasian pastoralists by approximately 2000 years. Given the geography, chronology and seed morphology of these data, we argue that mobile pastoralists were key agents in the spread of crop repertoires and the transformation of agricultural economies across Asia from the third to the second millennium BC.
引用
收藏
页数:7
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