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May 30, 2012

Review of Tropical Neolithic flows

Michael Petraglia at Ancient Indian Ocean Corridors blog draws our attention to a quite interesting review on the Neolithic of the various regions surrounding the Indian Ocean, all them of rather tropical climate:

Dorian K. Fuller et al., Across the Indian Ocean: the prehistoric movement of plants and animals. Antiquity 2012. Freely accessible. [→ updated link]

I strongly recommend full reading as I can only dedicate some space here and the study, while not really long, covers many diverse aspects of plant and animal domestication and translocation around the Indian Ocean. 


South Asia and Africa

First the authors deal with the issue of how the most important tropical crops of South Asia, which are mostly of African origin, arrived there. They conclude that the transfer took place at the very end of the Harappa (IVC) period, rather than earlier, even if it is confirmed that Harappa and the Persian Gulf (but not yet East Africa apparently) kept trading relations since much earlier. These African crops (millet and sorghum specially) were critical, as we know, in enabling the expansion of farming towards Southern India.


In return India gave Africa the zebuine species of cow, which, after hybridization, fueled the expansion of East African pastoralists into Equatorial areas.

This route between East Africa and South Asia is declared to be the precursor of the spice trade of later days:

The first hint of this spice trade comes from the findings of valued black peppercorns that were used to fragrance the nostrils of the deceased Pharaoh Ramses II (c. 1200 BC) (Plu 1985). This spice is endemic only to the wet forests of southern India (Asouti & Fuller 2008: 47), and in all likelihood was supplied by hunter-gatherer groups to coastal groups (Morrison 2002).


Tropical Asian crops

Another section deals with the transfer of diverse crops between South and SE Asia (and even as far as New Guinea).

Indian pulses migrated to the East, while a number of other crops (areca nut, sandalwood, betle leaf and maybe banana) did in the opposite direction. The origin of mangos and lemons is also discussed and seems distributed between both regions. 

Many of these flows may have been from approximately the same time as the African-Indian connection, in the late 2nd millennium BCE.



The Malagasy connection

Finally a third layer of agricultural flows appear to connect SE Asia with Africa, the most notable being the banana, but also yams, taro and chickens. 

This one seems most likely related to Austronesian (Malay) flows in westward direction, leading to the formation of the Malagasy people and the colonization of Madagascar. 

In their journey westwards, the proto-Malagasy appear to have left some maritime vocabulary in Sri Lanka, SW India and the Maldives, where they also left their outrigger technology. A variant of this one, with two outriggers, is also widespread through East Africa, from Somalia to Mozambique and, of course, Madagascar. 

The Austronesians would have spread these crops and the chicken to Africa, bringing also possibly some commensals like the rat, the mouse and the Asian shrew, as well as a weed. Some of these may however been introduced in several episodes.

5 comments:

  1. Interesting that Chinese millet arrives in the West at such an early date. I think the earliest evidence of a 'western' presence in what is now far-western China dates only from around 2,000 BCE or so.

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  2. The pertinent language of the paper says "Moving in the other direction was the Asian broomcorn millet (Panicum miliaceum) ultimately of Chinese origin, which had left China on westward trade routes by 2200 BC. Broomcorn millet is known from other central Asian sites from around 2000 BC and is found in Pakistan at 1900 BC, Yemen at around 2000 BC, and in Sudanese Nubia by 1700 BC, while being absent from intervening regions such as Egypt and Mesopotamia."

    IIRC, Millet predates rice farming in China and was localized in the Northern Chinese Neolithic as opposed to the Southern Chinese Neolithic. One presumes a route from ca. N. China to Mongolia to Central Asia to Pakistan between 2200 BCE to 1900 BCE, although the earlier Yemen date of 2000 BCE, suggests that it was really in Pakistan sooner and just wasn't found. The Pakistan interface could be either waning Harappan or early Indo-European; non-Harappan South Asians would have been further East.

    I think there were probably at least some Indo-European contacts with China at least a few hundred years before 2000 BCE. Tarim Basin is established by Tocharians ca. 2000 BCE and Mallory argues pretty persausively that they hailed from the NE of the Tarim Basin -- the pre-Tocharians could have had contacts with China.

    In this time frame, the overland vectors would probably be Indo-Europeans who were basically white guys. It certainly makes sense that Bronze Age technology goes East and that Chinese crops go West at roughly the same time.

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  3. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/36679/1/WRAP_Allaby_0380313-lf-100811-fuller_et_al_2011.pdf

    this link works
    the original one is broken

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