Early Holocene groundwater table fluctuations in relation to rice domestication in the middle Yangtze River basin, China

Tao Liu, Yan Liu, Qianli Sun, Yongqiang Zong, Brian Finlayson, Zhongyuan Chen

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13 Scopus citations

Abstract

The early Holocene environmental amelioration stimulated the trajectory of Neolithic farming cultures and specific geographic settings played a role in determining the nature of these cultures. Using microfossil evidence, the present study reveals that the fluctuations of the groundwater table substantially influenced rice domestication in the Dongting Lake area of the middle Yangtze River basin in the early Holocene. Our 14C-dated sediment core taken from the Bashidang (BSD) Neolithic site contains evidence that the site was a floodplain prior to human occupation ca. 8600 years ago. Poaceae, which contained wild rice (Oryza sp.) as indicated by combined pollen and phytolith evidence, and low counts of freshwater algae indicated a moist site condition. The area then gradually evolved into wetlands as the water table rose, in response to the increasing monsoon precipitation during the early Holocene. This favored rice domestication, assisted by firing and clearing, that continued to flourish for several hundred years. Finally, rice domestication declined during the late stage of the Pengtoushan culture, accompanied by evidence of the expansion of wetlands reflecting the effects of a rising groundwater table that had caused the cessation of rice farming at the Bashidang site after ca. 8000-7900 cal yr BP. This study shows that there are local effects at particular sites that may differ from the trend at the regional scale, necessitating a careful interpretation of the available evidence.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)79-85
Number of pages7
JournalQuaternary Science Reviews
Volume155
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jan 2017

Keywords

  • Early Holocene
  • Environmental transition
  • Groundwater table
  • Middle Yangtze basin
  • Monsoon dynamics
  • Rice domestication

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