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Ref ID: 32829
Ref Type: Journal Article
Authors: Kealhofer, Lisa
Title: Human-environmental relationships in prehistory: an introduction to current research in South and Southeast Asia
Date: 1996
Source: Asian Perspectives (1996)
Abstract: Regional environmental reconstruction is used to address the issue of human environmental relationships in northeastern Thailand from the Late Pleistocene through the Mid-Holocene. A 6.18 m core from Lake Kumphawapi was analyzed for phytoliths, and reveals a long sequence of complex climatic, geomorphological, and cultural changes in the landscape. Distinctive fluctuations in vegetation, as well as direct evidence from burned phytoliths, suggests broadcast burning of the mixed deciduous-dry deciduous forest began early in the Holocene. Subsistence strategies changed, often cyclically, until the Mid-Holocene when indirect evidence indicates agriculture became increasingly important and burning declined initially, shifting to vegetation commonly found in rice fields. The patterning and chronology of these data suggest that current models of agricultural development for the region need to be reevaluated.
Date Created: 12/28/2002
Volume: 35
Number: 2
Page Start: 111
Page End: 117