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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 117(39): 24138-24143, 2020 09 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32929013

RESUMO

Rice agriculture is the foundation of Asian civilizations south of the Yangtze River. Although rice history is well documented for its lower Yangtze homeland area, the early southward expansion of paddy rice farming is poorly known. Our study investigates this process using a compilation of paleoenvironmental proxies from coastal sediment cores from southeast China to Thailand and Island Southeast Asia. We propose that a shortage of land suitable for paddy fields, caused by marine transgression, constrained rice agriculture during the mid-Holocene. Rapid expansion of coastal plains, particularly in deltaic basins, over the past three millennia has coincided with increases in land suitable for rice cultivation. Our study also helps explain the past population movements of rice farmers.


Assuntos
Agricultura/história , Meio Ambiente , Fósseis , Oryza , Ásia Oriental , Geografia , História Antiga , Pólen
2.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 104(12): 4834-9, 2007 Mar 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17360400

RESUMO

Human settlement of Oceania marked the culmination of a global colonization process that began when humans first left Africa at least 90,000 years ago. The precise origins and dispersal routes of the Austronesian peoples and the associated Lapita culture remain contentious, and numerous disparate models of dispersal (based primarily on linguistic, genetic, and archeological data) have been proposed. Here, through the use of mtDNA from 781 modern and ancient Sus specimens, we provide evidence for an early human-mediated translocation of the Sulawesi warty pig (Sus celebensis) to Flores and Timor and two later separate human-mediated dispersals of domestic pig (Sus scrofa) through Island Southeast Asia into Oceania. Of the later dispersal routes, one is unequivocally associated with the Neolithic (Lapita) and later Polynesian migrations and links modern and archeological Javan, Sumatran, Wallacean, and Oceanic pigs with mainland Southeast Asian S. scrofa. Archeological and genetic evidence shows these pigs were certainly introduced to islands east of the Wallace Line, including New Guinea, and that so-called "wild" pigs within this region are most likely feral descendants of domestic pigs introduced by early agriculturalists. The other later pig dispersal links mainland East Asian pigs to western Micronesia, Taiwan, and the Philippines. These results provide important data with which to test current models for human dispersal in the region.


Assuntos
DNA Mitocondrial/genética , Geografia , Filogenia , Suínos/genética , Migração Animal , Animais , Sudeste Asiático , Teorema de Bayes , Haplótipos , História Antiga , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Oceania , Análise de Componente Principal
3.
Nature ; 431(7007): 443-6, 2004 Sep 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15386010

RESUMO

Some Pacific island societies, such as those of Easter Island and Mangareva, inadvertently contributed to their own collapse by causing massive deforestation. Others retained forest cover and survived. How can those fateful differences be explained? Although the answers undoubtedly involve both different cultural responses of peoples and different susceptibilities of environments, how can one determine which environmental factors predispose towards deforestation and which towards replacement of native trees with useful introduced tree species? Here we code European-contact conditions and nine environmental variables for 81 sites on 69 Pacific islands from Yap in the west to Easter in the east, and from Hawaii in the north to New Zealand in the south. We thereby detect statistical decreases in deforestation and/or forest replacement with island rainfall, elevation, area, volcanic ash fallout, Asian dust transport and makatea terrain (uplifted reef), and increases with latitude, age and isolation. Comparative analyses of deforestation therefore lend themselves to much more detailed interpretations than previously possible. These results might be relevant to similar deforestation-associated collapses (for example, Fertile Crescent, Maya and Anasazi) or the lack thereof (Japan and highland New Guinea) elsewhere in the world.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Geografia , Árvores/fisiologia , Altitude , Animais , Antozoários , Conservação dos Recursos Naturais , Poeira , Europa (Continente)/etnologia , Ilhas do Pacífico/etnologia , Oceano Pacífico , Dinâmica Populacional , Chuva , Solo/análise , Erupções Vulcânicas
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