Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-fscjk Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-28T17:41:10.204Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

What did grinding stones grind? New light on Early Neolithic subsistence economy in the Middle Yellow River Valley, China

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Li Liu
Affiliation:
Archaeology Program, School of Historical and European Studies, La Trobe University, Melbourne, VIC 3086, Australia
Judith Field
Affiliation:
Australian Centre for Microscopy & Microanalysis, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
Richard Fullagar
Affiliation:
Scarp Archaeology, P.O. Box 7241, South Sydney Hub, NSW 2015, Australia; Centre for Archaeological Science (CAS), School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW 2522, Australia
Sheahan Bestel
Affiliation:
School of Geography and Environmental Science, Monash University, Clayton, VIC 3800, Australia
Xingcan Chen
Affiliation:
Institute of Archaeology, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, 27 Wangfujing Dajie, Beijing, P.R. China 100710
Xiaolin Ma
Affiliation:
Henan Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, No. 9 Longhaibeisan Street, Zhengzhou, P.R. China 450000

Abstract

Grinding stones have provided a convenient proxy for the arrival of agriculture in Neolithic China. Not any more. Thanks to high-precision analyses of use-wear and starch residue, the authors show that early Neolithic people were mainly using these stones to process acorns. This defines a new stage in the long transition of food production from hunter-gatherer to farmer.

Type
Method
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

An, Z. 1989. Prehistoric agriculture in China, in Harris, D.R. & Hillman, G.C. (ed.) Foraging and farming: the evolution of plant exploitation: 643–50. London: Unwin Hyman.Google Scholar
Anderson, M.K. 2005. Tending the wild: Native American knowledge and management of California's natural resources. Berkley (CA): University of California Press.Google Scholar
Bellwood, P. 2005. First farmers: the origins of agricultural societies. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Bettinger, R., Malhi, R. & Mccarthy, H.. 1997. Central place models of acorn and mussell processing. Journal of Archaeological Science 24: 887–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chang, K-C. 1986. Archaeology of ancient China. New Haven (CT): Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Chen, W. 2002. Nongye Kaogu. Beijing: Wenwu.Google Scholar
Crawford, G.W. 1998. Scheduling and sedentism in the prehistory of northern Japan, in Rocek, T.R. & Bar-Yosef, O. (ed.) Seasonality and sedentism: archaeological perspectives from Old and New World sites (Peabody Museum Bulletin 6): 109–28. Cambridge (MA): Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University.Google Scholar
Cunnar, G. 2007. The production and use of stone tools at the Longshan period site of Liangchengzhn, China. New Haven (CT): Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Dubreuil, L. 2004. Long-term trends in Natufian subsistence: a usewear analysis of ground stone tools. Journal of Archaeological Science 31: 1613–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Flora of China Editorial Committee (ed.) 1985. Flora of China, Volume 16.1. Beijing: Kexue Press.Google Scholar
Fullagar, R. 1985. Use-polish on a muller from Ooraminna Rock Hole, central Australia. Report prepared for M. Smith, Museums and Art Galleries of the Northern Territory.Google Scholar
Fullagar, R. 1991. The role of silica in polish formation. Journal of Archaeological Science 18: 125.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fullagar, R. 2006a. Residues and usewear, in Balme, J. & Paterson, A. (ed.) Archaeology in practice: a student guide to archaeological analyses: 207–34. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Fullagar, R. 2006b. Starch grains, stone tools and modern hominin behaviour, in Ulm, S. & Lilley, I. (ed.) An archaeological life: papers in honour of Jay Hall (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit Research Report series 7): 191202. Brisbane: Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies Unit, The University of Queensland.Google Scholar
Fullagar, R. & Field, J.. 1997. Pleistocene seed-grinding implements from the Australian arid zone. Antiquity 71: 300307.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fullagar, R. & Jones, R.. 2004. Usewear and residue analysis of stone artefacts from the enclosed chamber, Rocky Cape, Tasmania. Archaeology in Oceania 39: 7993.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fullagar, R. & Wallis, L.. 2008. Usewear and residues on Aboriginal grinding patches from the Fortescue Metals Group Rail Construction Corridor Project, Pilbara. WAA Confidential Report prepared for Fortescue Metals Group Pty Ltd.Google Scholar
Fullagar, R., Field, J. & Kealhofer, L.. 2008. Grinding stones and seeds of change: starch and phytoliths as evidence of plant food processing, in Rowan, Y.M. & Ebeling, J.R. (ed.) New approaches to old stones: recent studies of ground stone artefacts: 159–72. London: Equinox.Google Scholar
Hall, J., Higgins, S. & Fullagar, R.. 1989. Plant residues on stone tools, in Beck, W., Clarke, A. & Head, L. (ed.) Plants in Australian archaeology (Tempus 1): 136–60. St. Lucia: Anthropology Museum, University of Queensland.Google Scholar
Hamon, C. 2008. Functional analysis of stone grinding and polishing tools from the earliest Neolithic of north-western Europe. Journal of Archaeological Science 25: 1502–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henan Institute of Cultural Relics. 1987. Changge Shigu yizhi fajue baogao [Excavation report of the Shigu site in Changge]. Huaxia Kaogu 1: 3125.Google Scholar
Henan Institute of Cultural Relics. 1999. Wuyang Jiahu. Beijing: Kexue Press.Google Scholar
Henan Provincial Museum. 1981. Henan Mixian Egou Beigang xinshiqi shidai yizhi [The Neolithic site at Egou Beigang in Mixian, Henan]. Kaoguxue jigan 1: 1-26, 48.Google Scholar
Higham, C. 2005. East Asian agriculture and its impact, in Scarre, C. (ed.) The human past: 234–63. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Kamminga, J. 1979. The nature of use-polish and abrasive smoothing, in Hayden, B. (ed.) Lithic usewear analysis: 143–57. London: Academic.Google Scholar
Lee, G.-A., Crawford, G.W., Liu, L. & Chen, X.. 2007. Plants and people from the early Neolithic to Shang periods in north China. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 104(3): 1087–92.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Liu, C. 2006. Dadiwan yizhi zhiwu yicun jianding baogao [Identification of plant remains from the Dadiwan site], in Gansu Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology (ed.) Qin'an Dadiwan: 914–16. Beijing: Wenwu Press.Google Scholar
Liu, L. 2004. The Chinese Neolithic: trajectories to early states. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Liu, L. 2008. Zhongguo shiqian de nianmo shiqi, jianguo caiji, dingju ji nongye qiyuan [Grinding stones, nut collection and origins of sedentism and agriculture in prehistoric China], in Editorial Board of ‘Essays for the Celebration of Ping-ti Ho's Ninetieth Birthday’ (ed.) He Ping-ti Xiansheng Jiushi Shouqing Wenji: 105–32. Xi'an: Sanqin Press.Google Scholar
Liu, L., Field, J., Weisskopf, A., Webb, J., Jiang, L., Wang, H. & Chen, X.. In press. The exploitation of acorn and rice in early Holocene Lower Yangzi River, China. Acta Anthropologica Sinica.Google Scholar
Lu, T. L.-D. 1999. The transition from foraging to farming and the origin of agriculture in China (British Archaeological Report International series 774) Oxford: J. & E. Hedges.Google Scholar
Luo, Y. 2007. Zhongguo Gudai Jiazhu Yanjiu [Domesticated pigs in ancient China]. Unpublished PhD dissertation, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.Google Scholar
Mandikos, M.N. 1998. Polyvinyl siloxane impression materials: an update on clinical use. Australian Dental Journal 43(6): 428–34.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mason, S.L.R. 1992. Acorns in human subsistence. Unpublished PhD dissertation, University College London.Google Scholar
Mason, S.L.R. 1996. Acornutopia? Determining the role of acorns in past human subsistence, in Wilkins, J., Harvey, D. & Dobson, M. (ed.) Food in antiquity: 1224. Exeter: University of Exeter Press.Google Scholar
Matsui, A. & Kanehara, M.. 2006. The question of prehistoric plant husbandry during the Jomon period in Japan. World Archaeology 38(2): 259–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meurers-Balke, J. & Lüning, J.. 1999. Some aspects and experiments concerning the processing of glume wheats, in Anderson, P. (ed.) Prehistory of agriculture: new experimental and ethnographic approaches (Monograph of the Institute of Archaeology, University of California 40): 238–53. Los Angeles (CA): Institute of Archaeology, University of California.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shi, X. 1992. The discovery of the pre-Yangshao culture and its significance, in Aikens, C.M. & Rhee, S.N. (ed.) Pacific north-east Asia in prehistory: hunter-fisher-gatherers, farmers, and sociopolitical elites: 125–32. Pullman (WA): Washington State University Press.Google Scholar
Smith, B.D. 1995. The emergence of agriculture. New York: Scientific American Library.Google Scholar
Smith, M.A. 1988. Central Australian seed grinding implements and Pleistocene grindstones, in Meehan, B. & Jones, R. (ed.) Archaeology with ethnography: an Australian perspective (Occasional Papers in Prehistory 15): 94108. Canberra: Department of Prehistory, Research School of Pacific Studies, The Australian National University.Google Scholar
Song, Z. 1997. Shiqian shiwu de jiagong jishu - lun moju yu chujiu de qiyuan [Food processing techniques in prehistory - on the origins of grinding tools, mortars and pestles]. Nongye Kaogu 3: 187–95.Google Scholar
Underhill, A. 1997. Current issues in Chinese Neolithic archaeology. Journal of World Prehistory 11: 103–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, Q. 2008. Haidai Diqu Shiqian Shiqi Mopan, Mobang Yanjiu [Functional analyses of prehistoric stone slabs and mullers in the Haidai region]. Unpublished PhD dissertation, Shandong University.Google Scholar
WU, J'A. 1986. Shiqi shidai de shimopan [Stone grinding slabs in the Neolithic period]. Shiqian Yanjiu 1(2): 4654.Google Scholar
Yan, W. 1992. Origins of agriculture and animal husbandry in China, in Aikens, C.M. & Rhee, S.N. (ed.) Pacific north-east Asia in prehistory: hunter-fisher-gatherers, farmers, and sociopolitical elites: 113–24. Pullman (WA): Washington State University Press.Google Scholar
Yang, X., Yu, J., Lu, H., Cui, T., Guo, J., Diao, X., Kong, Z., Liu, C. & Ge, Q.. 2009. Starch grain analysis reveals function of grinding stone tools at Shangzhai site, Beijing. Science in China Series D: Earth Sciences 52(8): 103222.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Young, H.R. & Syms, E.L.. 1980. The use of acetate peels in lithic analysis. Archaeometry 22(2): 205208.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhao, S. 2005. Shimopan, shimobang shi guwu jiagong gongju ma? [Were stone slabs and mullers used for processing cereals?]. Nongye Kaogu 3: 134–47.Google Scholar
Zhao, Z. 2004. Cong Xinglonggou yizhi fuxuan jieguo tan Zhongguo beifang hanzuo nongye qiyuan wenti [The origins of dry-land agriculture in north China based on the flotation results from the Xinglonggou site], in Nanjing Normal University (ed.) Dongya Kaogu: 188–99. Beijing: Wenwu Press.Google Scholar