The Origins and Spread of Agriculture and Pastoralism in Eurasia.
Barker, Graeme
This important and timely book is based around the proceedings of a
conference organized by David Harris on behalf of the Prehistoric
Society, at the time he was its President, held in September 1993 at the
Institute of Archaeology in London. The general rationale of the
conference, and this book, is stated in the editor's Introduction
(p. 2):
'to understand better the processes by which agriculture
originated and spread, we need to examine the evidence in broad,
explicitly comparative, frameworks. . . . Ideally, and eventually, such
comparison should be carried out at a global scale . . . [but] we are, I
suggest, likely to gain greater understanding of these complex processes
by examining, in depth but not in complete isolation, the evidence
currently available for each of the major continental land masses:
Eurasia, Africa and the Americas.'
Eurasia, he continues, is better understood than Africa and the
Americas, at least as far as Southwest Asia and Europe are concerned,
but recent investigations throughout Asia 'have produced sufficient
new data to justify an attempt to compare, and partially at least even
to synthesize, the evidence for Eurasia as a whole'. Two dozen
papers were delivered at the conference, which were then revised in the
light of the conference debates, sometimes with input from additional
authors. Two other papers were commissioned to broaden the coverage. The
final volume has 29 contributions including an introduction and
conclusion by the editor. The core of the volume is divided into four
sections, the first on 'Thematic Perspectives' and the other
three covering respectively 'Southwest Asia',
'Europe', and 'Central Asia to the Pacific'.
The aim of the first section is to provide a 'multi-disciplinary
thematic prelude', with a focus on seven thematic perspectives -
social, ecological, genetic, linguistic, biomolecular, epidemiological
and geographical. Tim Ingold (chapter 2) offers a typically stimulating
anthropological perspective centred on case studies of how non-Western
peoples today understand their relations with their crops and animals:
'for practitioners, growing crops and raising animals are not just
ways of producing food; they are forms of life'. In striking
contrast is the following paper by the geographer Mark Blumler,
stressing how climate, climatic change and the evolution of domesticable
plant species were all significant factors in the transition to farming.
Cavalli-Sforza (chapter 3) and Renfrew (4) reiterate their arguments for
inferring agricultural diffusion from what Cavalli-Sforza calls
'genetic geography'. There is a brief comment (5) by Martin
Jones, Terry Brown & Robin Aliaby on the (still largely unrealized)
potential of ancient DNA studies. Les Groube (6) offers a splendidly
iconoclastic retort to all of this, arguing that agriculture probably
began because humans had to breed like fury to keep apace with the
explosion of diseases that the Holocene climatic warming probably
unleashed ('perhaps we owe more to bugs that we dare admit').
And Andrew Sherratt rounds the section off with another archetypal paper
from his pen on how all of this can really be reduced to 'broad
structure' and core-periphery models, agriculture beginning through
'a chapter of rare but important accidents' in three
'global bottlenecks' (Mesoamerica, the Near East and Southeast
Asia). As these summaries convey, the papers of the first section
certainly do provide multi-disciplinary perspectives on the transition
to farming; but if their authors seem mostly to be occupying different
planets, how effective are the regional case-studies at applying their
separate perspectives within inter-disciplinary frameworks? In most
cases, not very.
The Southwest Asia section has seven papers, all of which follow
either Blumler's ecological perspective or the amended version of
Sherratt, arguing for what Hans-Peter Uerpmann (12, on animal
domestication) calls 'a rare constellation of environmental,
biological and social factors that occurred together only in a very
restricted area, during a short span of time . . . conscious human
action was not required, only reaction and transformation when the
process was already well under way' (p. 235). Daniel Zohary (9)
argues from modern distributions of the 'wild progenitors'
(always a problematic data source) that there was probably only a single
domestication event in the region for each major grain crop. In contrast
Gordon Hillman's chapter (10), the heftiest in the book, provides
detailed arguments and evidence that changes to steppe vegetation about
13,000 BC dramatically increased the availability and abundance of
protein-rich staples, accelerating trends in food storage and sedentism
first in the northwestern sector and then further east, with further
shifts to cereal cultivation throughout the region by the 9th millennium
prompted by increasing aridity and seasonal unpredictability in
rainfall. Frank Hole (14) explains caprine domestication in the Zagros
in the context of the same climatic trend. Tony Legge (13) presents the
evidence that caprine domestication seems to have taken place across the
region as a whole in the 9th millennium; he also suggests that this
event was 'a very local phenomenon, although one that is likely to
have occured at more than one place' (p. 259), though possible
reasons are not discussed. Andy Garrard, Sue Colledge & Louise
Martin (12) describe how agriculture spread eastwards to the steppe
country of eastern Jordan, but they also hedge their bets about the
relative importance of environmental, demographic and/or social factors
in the process. The section concludes with a paper by Ilse
Kohler-Rollefson on the later dispersal of the camel.
The four main papers of the European section are in striking
contrast, epitomizing the very different trajectory of European
Mesolithic and Neolithic studies in recent years: rejecting the
Cavalli-Sforza and Renfrew arguments for population dispersals, they all
downplay the role of incoming farmers and emphasize the likelihood of
indigenous foragers adopting domesticates - Paul Halstead on Greece
(16), Julian Thomas on central and northwest Europe (17), Marek Zvelebil
on the Baltic zone (18), and Douglas Price on southern Scandinavia (19).
Zvelebil's detailed paper is a persuasive example of the approach
he advocates - 'we need a better understanding of the process of
the transition to farming in order to apprehend its causes' - but
Halstead usefully explores the kind of social processes that might have
been involved, arguing that the establishment of farming in Greece
'was no less dependent on the neolithic social formation, and the
symbolic mediation of the internal contradictions between the household
and the village, than on the availability of appropriate plant cultigens
and livestock' (p. 306).
The third section on Asia has eight papers, in most of which the
emphasis is on describing the regional sequences of subsistence change
that are gradually being assembled, rather than discussing the possible
reasons for such change. The focus moves east and south: Turkmenistan
(21: David Harris & Chris Gosden), Baluchistan (22: Richard Meadow),
Japan (24: Keiji Imamura), New Guinea (26: Tim Bayliss-Smith), Melanesia
and Polynesia (27: Spriggs). There are also two substantial overview
papers, Ian Glover & Charles Higham (23) on the current evidence
throughout Asia for early rice cultivation, and Peter Bellwood
reiterating his arguments for discerning a neolithic dispersal across
the Pacific region on the evidence of modern language groupings, like
Renfrew's arguments earlier for Europe.
In his final overview (29), David Harris summarizes the regional
patterns that he can discern from the papers and offers the following
conclusions:
i there were probably only two 'pristine centres' of
domestication in Eurasia, the Levant (cereals and pulses by the 8th
millennium, sheep and goats by the 7th millennium) and the Huanghe and
Yangzi river basins in China (millet, rice and pigs by the 7th
millennium);
ii diffusion was therefore the dominant process elsewhere;
iii such diffusion is best explained in terms of incoming farmers
replacing or assimilating indigenous hunter-gatherers;
iv although he comments that he has deliberately excluded discussion
of 'why', he emphasizes the weight of evidence for linking the
earliest agriculture of the pristine centres with the climatic and
vegetational changes of the Pleistocene/Holocene transition.
As I have tried to convey in the chapter summaries, I find it rather
difficult to square some of these confident conclusions with the detail
of the evidence presented by the previous case studies. The thrust of
most recent work in Europe and southeast Asia, as in north Africa,
sub-Saharan Africa and the Americas, emphasizes the strength of evidence
for hunter-gatherers adopting agriculture, rather than being replaced or
assimilated by Neolithic farmers. Furthermore, where we have really
detailed regional sequences, we seem to be seeing ever more complexity
in terms of rates of adoption of domesticates and their incorporation
within and/or rejection by existing regimes: wholesale adoption within a
century or so here, gradual substitution over a thousand years or more
there, oscillations from hunting to farming and back to hunting
elsewhere, and so on. As Halstead (p. 306) comments, 'with
recognition of the complexity of the problem of early farming, a variety
of "why" questions may be posed and a corresponding diversity
of answers may be expected'.
Having argued in Prehistoric farming in Europe (1985), along with
Robin Dennell in his European economic prehistory (1983), for what at
that time seemed to many a heretical case for the transition to farming
in Europe needing to be understood more in terms of transformations
amongst the indigenous communities than Neolithic colonists, it is
strange to see this now becoming accepted orthodoxy in undergraduate
essays and conference sessions. The hard reality remains that neither in
Europe nor anywhere else in Eurasia can we yet describe in detail the
ecology, demography, subsistence base, social structure and ideological
world of communities on either side of what we currently discern as the
transition from hunting to farming, far less be certain about how their
two worlds did or did not interlink. We also need to think through the
likely archaeological signatures of traditional Neolithic displacement
models and how to distinguish them from the signatures of alternative
models. The indications of current research in parts of southeast Asia,
as in Africa, are that the population dispersal models in vogue there
are as simplistic as trying to explain all the European data in terms of
social competition by Mesolithic communities for new resources.
The origins and spread of agriculture and pastoralism in Eurasia is a
mine of information, well produced and edited, with an excellent
consistency of strength and relevance in the majority of the individual
papers. Most of the seven disciplinary perspectives of the first section
are not really integrated into the case studies, but that is more a
comment on the reality of current field programmes addressing
transitions to farming than on the seven authors or the editor. The book
certainly serves a major purpose in bringing together papers dealing
with agricultural transitions from the Baltic to Japan and New Guinea.
Its lasting contribution will be if it prompts students of early
agriculture in Europe, the Near East and Asia to read each others'
papers and see their relevance.
References
BARKER, G.W.W. 1985. Prehistoric farming in Europe. Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press.
DENNELL, R. 1983. European economic prehistory. London: Academic
Press.