2020
DOI: 10.1007/s11430-019-9585-2
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Kushan Period rice in the Amu Darya Basin: Evidence for prehistoric exchange along the southern Himalaya

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Cited by 10 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…There were also 1,406 Oryza sativa (rice) grains, which varied immensely in morphology and range from elongated to compact, but mostly overlapped with measurements for O. sativa ssp. japonica (Chen et al 2020). The most prominent legume is Lens culinaris (lentil).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…There were also 1,406 Oryza sativa (rice) grains, which varied immensely in morphology and range from elongated to compact, but mostly overlapped with measurements for O. sativa ssp. japonica (Chen et al 2020). The most prominent legume is Lens culinaris (lentil).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…japonica. Following this rule of thumb, the O. sativa at Barikot, like early examples of rice in the southern Himalaya and Central Asia, may have had East and not South Asian origins (Chen et al 2020). Vidale et al (2011) suggest that East Asian rice originally dispersed into northwest India through the mountain passes, referencing early O. sativa in pottery impressions reported by Costantini (1987).…”
Section: Water-demanding Cropsmentioning
confidence: 94%
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“…Archaeobotanists have argued for a rapid northward and westward dispersal of rice into the Guanzhong Plain and the Hehuang region of Gansu (Zhang et al 2010(Zhang et al , 2012Jin et al 2014). Current evidence seems to imply a slightly later dispersal south and west (Chen et al 2020;He et al 2017). Deng et al (2018) recently claimed to identify domesticated rice bulliform phytoliths in eastern Taiwan at Chaolaiqiao from 4200 years ago.…”
Section: East Asiamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rice cultivation appears to have made it to the Sichuan Plains at Baodun and Guiyanqiao by more than 4000 years ago (d' Alpoim Guedes et al 2013) and into Yunnan at Baiyangcun by 2640 BC (Dal Martello et al 2018). The lack of early archaeobotanical evidence for rice in the Hexi Corridor or northern Central Asia, has led scholars to suggest that ecological constraints would have hampered a northern dispersal (Chen et al 2020). Increasingly, scholars are accepting a demic expansion model, suggesting that grain surplus allowed for the growth and spread of farming populations along with cultivation techniques across Asia (Fuller 2011b;Cobo et al 2019).…”
Section: East Asiamentioning
confidence: 99%