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Cited by 38 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Whilst there is general acceptance for a Neolithic transference from southern China to MSEA, with a potentially ultimate origin in the Yangtze River, its timing, events and routes via river courses or coastal lowlands continue to be discussed (Higham 2002;Rispoli 2007;Fuller et al 2010;Nakamura 2010;Zhang and Hung 2010;Zhao 2010;Bellwood 2011;Castillo 2011;Higham et al 2011;Lu 2011). Increasingly, more interpretations posit multiple movements over a period of time and the adoption of selected traits in the transition to agriculture (Zhang and Hung 2010).…”
Section: Towards a Characterisation Of Neolithic An Sonmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whilst there is general acceptance for a Neolithic transference from southern China to MSEA, with a potentially ultimate origin in the Yangtze River, its timing, events and routes via river courses or coastal lowlands continue to be discussed (Higham 2002;Rispoli 2007;Fuller et al 2010;Nakamura 2010;Zhang and Hung 2010;Zhao 2010;Bellwood 2011;Castillo 2011;Higham et al 2011;Lu 2011). Increasingly, more interpretations posit multiple movements over a period of time and the adoption of selected traits in the transition to agriculture (Zhang and Hung 2010).…”
Section: Towards a Characterisation Of Neolithic An Sonmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whilst there is general acceptance for a Neolithic transference from southern China to MSEA, with a potentially ultimate origin in the Yangtze River, its timing, events and routes via river courses or coastal lowlands continue to be discussed (Higham 2002;Rispoli 2007;Nakamura 2010;Zhang and Hung 2010;Castillo 2011;Higham et al 2011;. Increasingly, more interpretations posit multiple movements over a period of time and the adoption of selected traits in the transition to agriculture (Zhang and Hung 2010).…”
Section: Towards a Characterisation Of Neolithic An Sonmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The traces of ancient farming communities would tend to have been better preserved in the hill tracts surrounding the Brahmaputran flood plains than on the fertile fields themselves. Even in East Asia, most salvageable rice agriculture sites are in the foothills or at the base of the foothills (Nakamura, 2010). Yet the earliest rice-based cultures may first have developed on those very flood plains.…”
Section: The Problem With the Archaeology Of Rice Agriculturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The domestication of japonica rice through genetic modification by selective breeding was possibly effectuated along the Yangtze around the beginning the fifth millennium BC by people, who previously relied far more heavily on the collecting of acorns, water chestnuts and foxnuts before becoming reliant on rice cultivation Fuller et al, 2007Nakamura, 2010;Ruddiman et al, 2008;Zhao, 2010). Rice cultivation reached the Yellow River basin during the third millennium BC (Crawford and Shen, 1998) and Formosa and Vietnam between 2500 and 2000 BC (Higham and Lu, 1998), but only spread throughout the Indo-Chinese peninsula between 1500 and 500 BC (Weber et al, 2010).…”
Section: The Problem With the Archaeology Of Rice Agriculturementioning
confidence: 99%