Social and environmental factors influencing dietary choices among Dawenkou culture sites, Late Neolithic China

Author:

Dong Yu123ORCID,Chen Songtao145,Ambrose Stanley H3,Underhill Anne6,Ling Xue7,Gao Mingkui8,Li Zhenguang8,Luan Fengshi1,Jin Guiyun12

Affiliation:

1. Joint International Research Laboratory of Environmental and Social Archaeology, Shandong University, China

2. Institute of Cultural Heritage, Shandong University, China

3. Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA

4. Key Laboratory of Alpine Ecology, Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China

5. CAS Center for Excellence in Tibetan Plateau Earth Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China

6. Department of Anthropology, Yale University, USA

7. School of Cultural Heritage, Northwest University, China

8. Shandong Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, China

Abstract

Archaeological cultures are commonly defined by typologies established from ceramic assemblages at sites dated to a relatively restricted timeframe and located in specific geographic regions. It is often assumed that cultural traditions, social organizations, and other aspects of lifeways were similar throughout the established cultural areas. However, variations in pottery assemblages, burial practices, house construction techniques, and subsistence strategies are observed among late Neolithic Dawenkou culture sites in China. This study uses stable isotopic, archaeobotanical, and archaeozoological analysis to investigate variation in diet at middle and late Dawenkou sites. We provide new isotopic data for two sites and a comparison of results for all studies to date for the Dawenkou culture area. There is significant synchronic and diachronic variation, both among and within sites, during the middle and late Dawenkou period. There are multiple potential explanations for this variability including constraints from environmental factors such as temperature, precipitation, local geomorphology, and social factors such as gender, social status, and ethnicity. This study demonstrates that closer examination of Dawenkou culture sites using multiple approaches provides a more nuanced understanding of variation in communities that deserve further analysis.

Funder

Shandong University

Wenner-Gren Foundation

National Science Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Paleontology,Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Archaeology,Global and Planetary Change

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