Climate and landscape change favouring early rice agriculture and appreciable human impact: Evidence from sediment δ13C in eastern China

Author(s):  
Mingzhe Dai ◽  
Bin Zhou ◽  
Yuanfeng Hu ◽  
Hongbo Zheng
2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Ding ◽  
Qinghai Xu ◽  
Pavel E. Tarasov

Abstract. Human impact is a well-known confounder in pollen-based quantitative climate reconstructions as most terrestrial ecosystems have been artificially affected to varying degrees. In this paper, we use a human-induced pollen dataset (H-set) and a corresponding natural pollen dataset (N-set) to establish pollen-climate calibration sets for temperate eastern China (TEC). The two calibration sets, taking a Weighted Averaging Partial Least Squares (WA-PLS) approach, are used to reconstruct past climate variables from a fossil record, which is located at the margin of the East Asian Summer Monsoon in north-central China and covers the late glacial–Holocene from 14.7 ka BP (thousand years before AD 1950). Ordination results suggest that mean annual precipitation (Pann) is the main explanatory variable of both pollen composition and percentage distributions in both datasets. The Pann reconstructions, based on the two calibration sets, demonstrate consistently similar patterns and general trends, suggesting a relatively strong climate impact on the regional vegetation and pollen spectra. However, our results also indicate that human impact may obscure climate signals derived from fossil pollen assemblages. In a test with modern climate and pollen data, the Pann influence on pollen distribution decreases in the H-set while the human influence index (HII) rises. Moreover, the relatively strong human impact reduces woody pollen taxa abundances, particularly in the sub-humid forested areas. Consequently, this shifts their model-inferred Pann optima to the arid-end of the gradient compared to Pann tolerances in the natural dataset, and further produces distinct deviations when the total tree pollen percentages are high in the fossil sequence (i.e. about 40 % for the Gonghai area). In summary, the calibration set with human impact used in our experiment can produce a reliable general pattern of past climate, but the human impact on vegetation affects the pollen-climate relationship and biases the pollen-based climate reconstruction.


The Holocene ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 743-759 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dorian Q Fuller ◽  
Jacob van Etten ◽  
Katie Manning ◽  
Cristina Castillo ◽  
Eleanor Kingwell-Banham ◽  
...  

We review the origins and dispersal of rice in Asia based on a data base of 443 archaeobotanical reports. Evidence is considered in terms of quality, and especially whether there are data indicating the mode of cultivation, in flooded (‘paddy’ or ‘wet’) or non-flooded (‘dry’) fields. At present it appears that early rice cultivation in the Yangtze region and southern China was based on wet, paddy-field systems from early on, before 4000 bc, whereas early rice in northern India and Thailand was predominantly dry rice at 2000 bc, with a transition to flooded rice documented for India at c. 1000 bc. On the basis of these data we have developed a GIS spatial model of the spread of rice and the growth of land area under paddy rice. This is then compared with a review of the spread of ungulate livestock (cattle, water buffalo, sheep, goat) throughout the Old World. After the initial dispersal through Europe and around the Mediterranean (7000–4000 bc), the major period of livestock expansion is after 3000 bc, into the Sub-Saharan savannas, through monsoonal India and into central China. Further expansion, to southern Africa and Southeast Asia dates mostly after 1000 bc. Based on these two data sets we provide a quantitative model of the land area under irrigated rice, and its likely methane output, through the mid to late Holocene, for comparison to a more preliminary estimate of the expansion of methane-producing livestock. Both data sets are congruent with an anthropogenic source of later Holocene methane after 3000 bc, although it may be that increase in methane input from livestock was most significant in the 3000–1000 bc period, whereas rice paddies become an increasingly significant source especially after 2000 bc.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (6) ◽  
pp. 231 ◽  
Author(s):  
He Xiao ◽  
Yunhui Liu ◽  
Liangtao Li ◽  
Zhenrong Yu ◽  
Xiaotong Zhang

2011 ◽  
Vol 56 (10) ◽  
pp. 996-1004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Ding ◽  
RuiMing Pang ◽  
QingHai Xu ◽  
YueCong Li ◽  
XianYong Cao

2010 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 57-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leo Aoi Hosoya ◽  
Yo-Ichiro Sato ◽  
Dorian Q. Fuller
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 99 ◽  
pp. 104891
Author(s):  
Jianchao Peng ◽  
Siqi Yan ◽  
Dirk Strijker ◽  
Qun Wu ◽  
Wei Chen ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 79 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-126
Author(s):  
D Tian ◽  
J Su ◽  
F Zhou ◽  
B Mayer ◽  
D Sein ◽  
...  

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