TY - JOUR
T1 - On the long and winding road
T2 - unravelling the late emergence of Neolithic agriculture in the Nile Delta
AU - Zhao, Xiaoshuang
AU - Kaniewski, David
AU - Wang, Yanna
AU - Marriner, Nick
AU - Salem, Alaa
AU - Alassal, Said E.
AU - Liu, Yan
AU - Jiang, Feng
AU - Chen, Jing
AU - Sun, Qianli
AU - Li, Maotian
AU - Thomas, Ian
AU - Finlayson, Brian
AU - Sheisha, Hader
AU - Morhange, Christophe
AU - Otto, Thierry
AU - Luce, Frédéric
AU - Chen, Zhongyuan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2025/7/1
Y1 - 2025/7/1
N2 - Despite the Nile Delta's abundant natural resources, the emergence of Neolithic agriculture did not evolve in tandem with neighboring regions, long raising questions about the underlying factors contributing to this delay. We analyzed pollen and non-pollen microfossils of three Predynastic sites (Buto - Tell el-Fara'in, Sais - Sa el-Hagar and Kom el-Khilgan) to track the environmental factors hindering the emergence and development of herding and farming in the Nile Delta before 7000 cal. BP. High-resolution-dated microfossils showed that during the African Humid Period, the delta experienced environmental instability, characterized by remarkably high Nile discharge and rapid sea-level rise, impeding early human occupation of the deltaic plain. Sea-level stabilization and declining Nile discharge beginning ca. 7000 years ago promoted herding as an opportunistic activity in coping with and exploiting the delta's uninhabitable environmental setting. This pastoral livelihood transitioned to sedentary farming that prevailed a millennium after the deltaic setting became stable.
AB - Despite the Nile Delta's abundant natural resources, the emergence of Neolithic agriculture did not evolve in tandem with neighboring regions, long raising questions about the underlying factors contributing to this delay. We analyzed pollen and non-pollen microfossils of three Predynastic sites (Buto - Tell el-Fara'in, Sais - Sa el-Hagar and Kom el-Khilgan) to track the environmental factors hindering the emergence and development of herding and farming in the Nile Delta before 7000 cal. BP. High-resolution-dated microfossils showed that during the African Humid Period, the delta experienced environmental instability, characterized by remarkably high Nile discharge and rapid sea-level rise, impeding early human occupation of the deltaic plain. Sea-level stabilization and declining Nile discharge beginning ca. 7000 years ago promoted herding as an opportunistic activity in coping with and exploiting the delta's uninhabitable environmental setting. This pastoral livelihood transitioned to sedentary farming that prevailed a millennium after the deltaic setting became stable.
KW - Animal-plant microfossils
KW - Livelihood transition
KW - Nile Delta
KW - Nile discharge
KW - Sea-level rise
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105002923718
U2 - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2025.109368
DO - 10.1016/j.quascirev.2025.109368
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105002923718
SN - 0277-3791
VL - 359
JO - Quaternary Science Reviews
JF - Quaternary Science Reviews
M1 - 109368
ER -