4.2 Article

Transitions in Palaeoecology and Technology: Hunter-Gatherers and Early Herders in the Gobi Desert

期刊

JOURNAL OF WORLD PREHISTORY
卷 30, 期 1, 页码 1-80

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10963-016-9100-5

关键词

Hunter-gatherers; Herders; Mongolia; China; Neolithic; Bronze Age; Deforestation

资金

  1. Social Sciences Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) [756-2015-0019]
  2. Wenner-Gren Foundation
  3. Franklin Research Grant from the American Philosophical Society
  4. Asian American Alumni
  5. Faculty Association, University of Arizona
  6. School of Anthropology, University of Arizona
  7. SSHRC Doctoral Fellowship [752-2005-0035]
  8. American Council of Learned Societies
  9. Henry Luce Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The desert and arid steppes of Mongolia and northern China were geographically central to the spread of pastoralism and the rise of pastoralist states, but research on the organizational strategies of pre-pastoralist hunter-gatherers and the spread of herding has been extremely limited. Until recently, catalogues of sites collected by Westerners in the 1920s and 1930s comprised the body of English-language publications on Gobi Desert prehistory. This article introduces a wealth of new site-specific and interpretive data, drawing on English-language sources as well as Russian-and Mongolian-language publications to create a synthesis for the prehistory of the Gobi Desert from the end of the Last Glacial Maximum to the adoption of herding. Special emphasis is placed on the relationship between a major shift in desert ecosystems, comparable to the 'greening of the Sahara', the establishment of an oasis-based broad-spectrum foraging strategy, and progressive desertification and deforestation after 2000 BC. We conclude that an oasis-based adaptation was contemporaneous with the expansion of forests and wetlands and persisted throughout the early stages of herding. A major decline in these economies occurs after 1000 BC, in conjunction with continuing trends towards heightened aridity and major societal changes across Northeast Asia. The persistent co-existence of Bronze Age burials and microblade-based habitation sites around oases, as well as similarities in material culture, suggest that these groups overlapped geographically or were the same entity.

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