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Approaching rice domestication in South Asia: New evidence from Indus settlements in northern India.

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Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Authors

Bates, J 
Petrie, CA 
Singh, RN 

Abstract

The nature and timing of rice domestication and the development of rice cultivation in South Asia is much debated. In northern South Asia there is presently a significant gap (c.4200 years) between earliest evidence for the exploitation of wild rice (Lahuradewa c.6000 BCE) and earliest dated evidence for the utilisation of fully domesticated rice (Mahagara c.1800 BCE). The Indus Civilisation (c.3000-1500 BCE) developed and declined during the intervening period, and there has been debate about whether rice was adopted and exploited by Indus populations during this 'gap'. This paper presents new analysis of spikelet bases and weeds collected from three Indus Civilisation settlements in north-west India, which provide insight into the way that rice was exploited. This analysis suggests that starting in the period before the Indus urban phase (Early Harappan) and continuing through the urban (Mature Harappan/Harappan), post-urban (Late Harappan) and on into the post-Indus Painted Grey Ware (PGW) period, there was a progressive increase in the proportion of domesticated-type spikelet bases and a decrease in wild-types. This pattern fits with a model of the slow development of rice exploitation from wild foraging to agriculture involving full cultivation. Importantly, the accompanying weeds show no increased proportions of wetland species during this period. Instead a mix of wetland and dryland species was identified, and although these data are preliminary, they suggest that the development of an independent rice tradition may have been intertwined with the practices of the eastern most Indus peoples. These data also suggest that when fully domesticated Oryza sativa ssp. japonica was introduced around 2000 BCE, it arrived in an area that was already familiar with domesticated rice cultivation and a range of cultivation techniques.

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Keywords

Cultivation systems, Indus Civilisation, Macrobotanical analysis, Rice (Oryza sativa), South Asia

Journal Title

J Archaeol Sci

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Journal ISSN

0305-4403
1095-9238

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier BV
Sponsorship
European Research Council (648609)
This research was carried out as part of JB's PhD research funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, in the GPR laboratory in the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge. Samples were provided by the Land, Water and Settlement project, which was co-directed by CAP and RNS, and is part of a collaboration between the University of Cambridge and Banaras Hindu University, which has operated with the support of the Archaeological Survey of India. The project was funded by the UK India Education Research Initiative, British Academy Stein Arnold Fund, Isaac Newton Trust, McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research and the Research Councils UK. Additional fieldwork funding for JB was provided by the AHRC, Rouse-Ball Research Fund, Cambridge India Partnership Fund, Division of Archaeology Fieldwork Fund and Trinity College Projects Fund.