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Ref ID: 27829
Ref Type: Journal Article
Authors: Chi, Zhang
Hung, Hsiao-chun
Title: Late hunter-gatherers in southern China, 18,000-3,000 BC
Date: 2012
Source: Antiquity
DOI: 10.1017/S0003598X00062438
Abstract: The authors present new research on social and economic developments in southern China in the Early Holocene, ninth to fifth millennia BC. The Neolithic package doesn't really work for this fascinating chapter of the human experience, where pottery, social aggregation, animal domestication and rice cultivation all arrive at different places and times. The authors define the role of the pottery-using foragers, sophisticated hunter-gatherers who left shell or fish middens in caves and dunes. These colonising non-farmers shared numerous cultural attributes with rice cultivators on the Yangtze, their parallel contemporaries over more than 5000 years. Some agriculturalists became hunter-foragers in turn when they expanded onto less fertile soils. No simple linear transition then, but the practice of ingenious strategies, adaptations and links in a big varied land.
Volume: 86
Number: 331
Page Start: 11
Page End: 29