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The transition to a barley-dominant cultivation system in Tibet: First millennium BC archaeobotanical evidence from Bangga
•Bangga (1055-211BC) represents the first systemic archaeobotanical study in central Tibet.•This article dates the transition to a barley-dominant economy in high-elevation Tibet.•Research suggests that both ecological and social factors helped accelerate this crop transition. Historically, agricult...
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Published in: | Journal of anthropological archaeology 2021-03, Vol.61, p.101242, Article 101242 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | •Bangga (1055-211BC) represents the first systemic archaeobotanical study in central Tibet.•This article dates the transition to a barley-dominant economy in high-elevation Tibet.•Research suggests that both ecological and social factors helped accelerate this crop transition.
Historically, agricultural and culinary traditions on the Tibetan Plateau have centered on a specific variety of naked frost-tolerant barley. Single-crop-dominant cultivation systems were rare in the ancient world, and we know little about how, why, and exactly when and where this unique barley-dominant economy developed. Previous research has shown that early cultivation systems in Tibet relied on a mix of barley, wheat, and millets, and that a barley-dominant economy first formed around two millennia ago. However, systematically collected data from the transition period between a mixed-cropping and a barley-dominant system have been lacking. We present new archaeobotanical data from the Bangga site (ca. 1055-211BC) in central Tibet, and compare it with a growing corpus of data from other archaeological sites at high elevations across the plateau. We argue that a specialized barley-dominant farming system started to develop, due to a combination of ecological and social factors, at least a millennia earlier than previously recognized in central Tibet and this was eventually adopted across a large geographic area in high-altitude regions (3500 masl) of Tibet. |
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ISSN: | 0278-4165 1090-2686 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jaa.2020.101242 |