2019
DOI: 10.1007/s12520-019-00795-7
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Dry, rainfed or irrigated? Reevaluating the role and development of rice agriculture in Iron Age-Early Historic South India using archaeobotanical approaches

Abstract: Domestic rice agriculture had spread across the mainland Indian subcontinent by c.500 BC. The initial spread of rice outside the core zone of the central Gangetic Plains is thought to have been limited by climatic constraints, particularly seasonal rainfall levels, and so the later spread of rice into the dry regions of South India is largely supposed to have relied on irrigation. This has been associated with the development of ritual water features in the Iron Age (c.1000–500 BC), and to the subsequent devel… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…While the precise distinction between wet and dry rice in terms of this ratio may be open to some discussion, it is clear that low values indicate dry (rainfed rice). Based on recent Indian work Kingwell-Banham ( 2019a , b ) took as a dry ecology a sensitive: fixed ratio values < 1.5, whereas Fuller et al ( 2016 ): Fig. 5 ) took ratios < 1 as definitely dry, with wet ratios perhaps as low as 1.25, and semi-wet ratio between 0.9 and 1.2.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…While the precise distinction between wet and dry rice in terms of this ratio may be open to some discussion, it is clear that low values indicate dry (rainfed rice). Based on recent Indian work Kingwell-Banham ( 2019a , b ) took as a dry ecology a sensitive: fixed ratio values < 1.5, whereas Fuller et al ( 2016 ): Fig. 5 ) took ratios < 1 as definitely dry, with wet ratios perhaps as low as 1.25, and semi-wet ratio between 0.9 and 1.2.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…5 ) took ratios < 1 as definitely dry, with wet ratios perhaps as low as 1.25, and semi-wet ratio between 0.9 and 1.2. Kingwell-Banham ( 2019a , b ) also inferred that values > 3 indicate systematic irrigation, whereas intermediate values (1.5–3) are wet ecologies but not necessarily irrigated. We expect transplanted rice systems to fall in the irrigated range.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The historical patterns of most of Southeast Asia were based on the availability of large populations that provided labour for highly productive wet rice, with less productive forms of agriculture in the hills providing an anarchic refuge from state power (Scott 2009). Although it is beyond the scope of this article, we see similar transitions to more wet rice production linked to increasing population density, urbanisation and social complexity in many parts of ancient India (see Shaw et al 2007;Fuller and Qin 2009;Kingwell-Banham 2019).…”
Section: Intensive Wet Rice and Urbanisationmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…For South Asia, my own research region, any serious consideration in such discourse of how posited changes in food production impacted upon and were digested by religio-philosophical traditions or by groups concerned with human health and wellbeing is notably absent, while archaeobotanical accounts of later agrarian shifts such as the spread of rice during the early-historical period, engage with religion, ritual and ethical concerns only in the most superficial and generalized way. Ritual is commonly treated as a discrete set of practices and theologies operating at the margins of society and disconnected in a polarized fashion from economic and technological spheres, as illustrated by recent discussions of whether rice in South India was being cultivated as an economic or 'symbolic' crop (Kingwell-Banham 2019).…”
Section: Archaeology As Environmental Humanities: 'Worldview' and Religionmentioning
confidence: 99%