Litcius/Paper detail

Prehistoric agricultural decision making in the western Himalayas: ecological and social variables

Li Tang, Hongliang Lü, Xinzhou Chen, Hailun Xu, Nicole Boivin, Michael Storozum, Feng Yang, Shuai Li, Xinyi Liu, Robert N. Spengler

2022Antiquity16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The high-altitude landscape of western Tibet is one of the most extreme environments in which humans have managed to introduce crop cultivation. To date, only sparse palaeoeconomic data have been reported from this region. The authors present archaeobotanical evidence from five sites (dating from the late first millennium BC and the early first millennium AD) located in the cold-arid landscape of western Tibet. The data indicate that barley was widely grown in this region by c . 400 BC but probably fulfilled differing roles within local ecological constraints on cultivation. Additionally, larger sites are characterised by more diverse crop assemblages than smaller sites, suggesting a role for social diversity in the development of high-altitude agriculture.

Topics & Concepts

PrehistoryGeographyAgricultureAridAltitude (triangle)EcologyCropArchaeologyBiologyForestryMathematicsGeometryArchaeology and ancient environmental studiesPacific and Southeast Asian StudiesPleistocene-Era Hominins and Archaeology