Notes on new advancements and revelations in the agricultural archaeology of early rice domestication in the Dongting Lake region.
Anping, Pei
The Liyang plain, located in the northwest of Hunan province, is
part of the plain on the north of Dongting Lake. It is situated at
longitude 111 [degrees]22[minutes]30[seconds]E to 111
[degrees]51[minutes]30[seconds]E, and latitude
29[degrees]35[minutes]31[seconds]N to 29
[degrees]47[minutes]30[seconds]N. It is made up of the Li River, its
tributaries and the alluvial plain, and occupies about 600 sq. km in
area [ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURE 1 OMITTED].
The plain is saucer-shaped and surrounded by small hills on three
sides, joined at the eastern part to the plain north of Dongting Lake.
The area is a classic 'plate-basin' structure. Inside its
boundaries, the land is broad and flat, with small streams winding in
different directions, and lakes and ponds dotting the landscape. It is
32-45 m above sea level, with an incline of 2 [degrees] to 3 [degrees].
The climate of the plain is a mid- to northern-subtropical monsoon climate, with obvious continental characteristics. It has abundant
rainfall, plenty of sunshine, warmth, and humidity. The average annual
temperature is over 16.5 [degrees] centigrade. The spring, summer, and
autumn together last longer than eight months. The average annual amount
of sunshine is 1770 hours, and the annual precipitation is 11001300 mm
[ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURE 2 OMITTED].
Archaeological studies in the region indicate unusually favourable
geographical and environmental conditions for human life over a long
period, and high levels of cultural activity.
In 1988, the archaeological site at Pengtoushan in Lixian
(prefecture) in the Liyang plain was discovered, dating from about 9000
years ago. At the time of discovery the site contained the earliest
indications of rice domestication in the world, arousing great interest
and attention from world archaeologists and agricultural scientists.
Since then, another site has been excavated in Bashidang, Lixian,
which has also yielded important finds towards our understanding of the
origins of rice culture and its development in the Dongting Lake region.
This site has two stratigraphic layers representing two time
periods: early and later. The upper site is dated from about 8000 years
ago and covers an area of over 30,000 sq. m. It is like the Pengtoushan
site only 20 km distant, and also belongs to the 'Pengtoushan
culture' [ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURE 1 OMITTED].
Six more excavations in Bashidang between 1993 and 1997 have
revealed the earliest evidence of the Neolithic in China, including
village defence ditches and walled fortresses. An unexpected discovery,
dating from the same period, was mud from the edge of an ancient
riverbed containing samples of organic matter that were very rich and
complete [ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURE 3 OMITTED], including rice kernels
with and without the husk [ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURES 4-6 OMITTED] and
many animal and plant remains.
Since the late 1970s excavations at the site of Hemudu in Zhejiang
(dated from 7000 BP) have yielded evidence for rice domestication, and
the academic world has had to revise its views of rice domestication in
China. The current theories claim that the centre of rice domestication
was in the lower reaches of the Yangtze River. However, the discovery
made at the Pengtoushan site called this into question. First, it proved
that the origin of rice domestication and its practice are two different
phenomena. Whilst the Hemudu and Pengtoushan sites showed signs that the
practice and development of rice domestication was already developed,
this did not necessarily prove that the practice originated in there.
Second, it raises the possibility of independent rice domestication and
the likelihood that there may have been multiple places of origin.
Importantly, the new sites show that the middle reaches of the Yangtze
also constituted a centre for rice domestication. At Pengtoushan one
contentious source of rice grains and husks is fired clay used to make
pottery. Organic matter was mixed with clay in order to make it stronger
and more permeable, but it had to be kneaded and fired at a high
temperature in the process and most of the grains were crushed or
burned, and fused together with the clay [ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURE 7
OMITTED]. Clay impressions are difficult in the biological
investigations and measurements necessary to identify the rice grains.
Scholars from Japan, Korea, and Australia voiced their suspicion that
the rice in these vessels was wild rice instead of domesticated rice.
Organic finds in the river mud from Bashidang amounted to approximately
15,000 grains of rice, both husked and wholegrain, in an area of less
than 100 sq. m. These grains were apparently cultivated rice (wild rice
breaks off the stalk so easily that it is unlikely that so many grains
of the wild varieties would be found in one place) and suggests that the
early Pengtoushan rice was also cultivated. The organic material
provides further support for the theory that the middle reaches of the
Yangtze River constitute one of the earliest rice domestication centres
in China, and probably the world.
Good preservation of organic rice grains is rare, due to
post-depositional damage and the acidity of the Yangtze soil. The poor
evidence led to sweeping conclusions, and results were neither reliable
nor scientific. Bashidang has produced not only the most primitive
cultivated rice, but also the largest sample, and its importance permits
greater accuracy in the determination of the characteristics of early
primitive cultivated rice.
Recently I invited Prof. Zhang Wenxu of the Chinese Agricultural
University to do a preliminary assessment and study of Bashidang
domesticated rice.
According to the observations and measurements of the external
appearance of the rice kernels made using a stereo microscope, and the
observations of the structure of bi-peak tubercles of lemma of rice made
with an S-450 scanning electro-microscope, we have now identified three
characteristics of the Bashidang rice ([ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURES 8-13
OMITTED], TABLES 1-4):
1 Length-width is smaller than modern indica and japonica and
relates to small-grain rice.
2 Shared characteristics between indica, japonica and common wild
rice suggested that indica and japonica differentiated later on.
3 Ratio of length to width (range of change in characteristics of
the bi-peak tubercle) shows a tendency to differentiate to indica types.
The early cultivated rice from Bashidang represents the small-grain
ancient rice at a precise stage in the history of its evolution. We
suggest it is called 'Bashidang ancient cultivated rice'.
Research in early rice domestication and its economic role has
lacked good evidence. It was not clear at what stage rice was exploited
in the cultivation of plants. The 'Bashidang' evidence
provides support for the arguments that cultivation of other wetland
plants, including walter caltrop and lotus root, had already taken place
by that time.
The water caltrop is an annual plant which can be eaten either raw
or cooked. It will keep for over a year, and can be dried or fried. Not
only is the fruit edible when ripe, but the tender leaves are also
edible even before the fruit ripens. Its cultivation requirements are
also simple. One need only throw the fruit into the water or marsh to
cultivate the plant and yield a plentiful harvest. The empty fruit
shells remain, and measurement of the shell allows estimation of the
size of the fruit once contained therein, and estimate of the food
provided by this plant.
[TABULAR DATA FOR TABLE 1 OMITTED]
[TABULAR DATA FOR TABLE 2 OMITTED]
TABLE 3. Frequency of grain characteristics of Bashidang ancient
rice compared with variant area of hsien, keng and Oryza rufipogon.
?? where are data for ancient rice?
species of hsien keng Oryza rufipogon
ancient rice no. of % no. of % no. of %
grains grains grains
grain length 28 21.1 76 57.1 12 9.0
grain width 49 36.8 0 0 97 72.9
l/w 122 91.7 2 1.5 85 63.9
[TABULAR DATA FOR TABLE 4 OMITTED]
The lotus is a perennial plant. At Bashidang, in addition to lotus
seeds of the same period as Pengtoushan, large ceramic plates formed in
the shape of lotus flowers were also found. This shows the extent to
which the lotus plant was valued at the time. Cultivation of the lotus
plant is also easy. One just buries the roots, or throws the lotus seeds
into the water. There is also a lengthy time period of harvest and
consumption of the lotus root. It can be picked and eaten 11 out of 12
months in the year, and the yield is high.
The cultivation of other food plaints supplemented wet rice when
food supplies were low and continued until rice became the main staple
food.
Rice remains dating back to 10,000 BP have been found in limestone
caves located in various sites in mountain basins, including Yuchan
(Jade Toad) Rock in Dao County in the Nanling hinterland of southern
Hunan, and the 'Wannian xianrendong' (10,000-year Immortal
Cave) of the Qinling hills in northeastern Jiangxi, Diaotonghuan.
However these discoveries definitely do not show the cultural influence
of Pengtoushan and Bashidang. Instead they indicate that practices in
the mountainous areas and the plains took a separate course of
development. The sites in the basins within the mountainous areas,
although continuously inhabited later on, did not manifest cultivation
on the same scale as that indicated by discoveries in Pengtoushan and
Bashidang, nor did they achieve the same level of cultural development
or degree of social organization. There is a long and continuous
sequence of occupation in the Liyang Plain, from early Palaeolithic
until the Neolithic. The evidence from Pengtoushan and Bashidang shows
that rice cultivation developed to a productive scale in an extremely
short time.
There are three reasons for this scale of development. The first
was population increase, which put pressure on subsistence agriculture and accelerated development. The second was the high productivity of the
plains and their varied environments of lakes and marsh, allowing
expansion of plant cultivation. The third is the cultural and
environmental benefit offered by the plains, enabling the development of
agricultural knowledge and complex social organization.