2014
DOI: 10.5751/es-06528-190268
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Abstract: ABSTRACT. We investigated the relationship between a 2000-year history of nomadic migration and climate change in historical China. By using updated data and statistical methods, the study solved several unanswered questions from past research about the relationship between climate change and the nomadic migration, especially over the long term and on a large spatial scale. The study used correlation analysis, multiple regression analysis, and Granger causality analysis to quantitatively verify the following c… Show more

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Cited by 56 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…However, we verify the conformity of the national precipitation record of Pei et al (2014) with at least F I G U R E 1 Precipitation data series from Pei and Zhang (2014) and migration records in each province. However, we verify the conformity of the national precipitation record of Pei et al (2014) with at least F I G U R E 1 Precipitation data series from Pei and Zhang (2014) and migration records in each province.…”
Section: Source Of Response Variable and Covariatesmentioning
confidence: 52%
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“…However, we verify the conformity of the national precipitation record of Pei et al (2014) with at least F I G U R E 1 Precipitation data series from Pei and Zhang (2014) and migration records in each province. However, we verify the conformity of the national precipitation record of Pei et al (2014) with at least F I G U R E 1 Precipitation data series from Pei and Zhang (2014) and migration records in each province.…”
Section: Source Of Response Variable and Covariatesmentioning
confidence: 52%
“…First, basic IFD assumes that relocation is unconstrained (Tremayne & Winterhalder, 2017;Winterhalder et al, 2010), but the migration of nomadic minorities in imperial China nearly always caused conflicts with agriculturalists who already occupied the regions to which they were attracted (Fang & Liu, 1992;Pei & Zhang, 2014;Pei et al, 2016). Second, the basic IFD focuses on density-dependent changes in habitat suitability due to population growth and decline.…”
Section: Ideal Free and Despotic Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Some social events were notably in synchrony or were closely and intricately correlated with climate change. For example, studies have found that climate change has had an impact on agricultural production, population migration, economic fluctuation and peasant uprisings, and has even led to the replacement of dynasties, social vicissitudes and civilization collapse (Weiss and Bradley, 2001; Zhang et al ., 2007, 2015; Lee and Zhang, 2010; Butzer, 2012; Amorosi et al ., 2013; Hsiang et al ., 2013; Buckley et al ., 2014; Chung et al ., 2014; Pei and Zhang, 2014; Pei et al ., 2016; Welc and Marks, 2014; Zheng et al ., 2014). These studies have explained the natural factors leading to the occurrence of historical events (deMenocal, 2001; Haug et al ., 2003; Büntgen et al ., 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%