Paleo-health of Neolithic wet-rice farmers in the Yangtze River Delta: a comparison with early millet farmers in northern China
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- Okazaki Kenji
- Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, Tottori University
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- Takamuku Hirofumi
- Doigahama Site Anthropological Museum
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- Itahashi Yu
- Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Tsukuba
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- Gakuhari Takashi
- Center for Cultural Resource Studies, Kanazawa University
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- Yoneda Minoru
- The University Museum, The University of Tokyo
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- Hudson Mark
- Language and the Anthropocene Research Group, Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology
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- Zhu Xiaoting
- Department of Archaeology, Nanjing Museum
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- Rui Guoyao
- Zhejiang Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology
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- Chen Jie
- Department of Archaeology, Shanghai Museum
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Description
<p>Several cases that do not fit the agricultural adaptation model, in which people’s health deteriorated with the shift from hunting-gathering to farming, have been reported, such as the introduction of rice agriculture during the Yayoi Period in Japan and the Iron Age in Southeast Asia, where health was maintained or improved. However, the health of rice farmers in the homeland areas has rarely been reported. This study aims to clarify the frequency and degree of stress markers inscribed on Neolithic human bones in the Yangtze River Delta, one of the origins of rice agriculture, and to elucidate the state of adaptation when humans first engaged in rice agriculture. The materials of this study are the Early Neolithic site of Majiabang, and the Late Neolithic sites of Guangfulin and Jiangzhuang. Several millet farming groups in northern China were used as comparative materials. The results show that the Neolithic rice farming groups in the Yangtze River Delta generally had a higher frequency of stress markers than the millet farming groups in northern China. In particular, the Late Neolithic Guangfulin assemblage had higher frequencies, while the Early Neolithic Majiabang assemblage tended to have relatively low frequencies of porotic hyperostosis and cribra orbitalia. These results suggest that people’s health deteriorated in the Late Neolithic period, when the scale of paddy rice cultivation expanded, as a result of the new subsistence activities and rice-oriented diet.</p>
Journal
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- Anthropological Science
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Anthropological Science 132 (2), 65-77, 2024
The Anthropological Society of Nippon
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Keywords
Details 詳細情報について
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- CRID
- 1390020132249379712
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- NII Book ID
- AA11307827
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- ISSN
- 13488570
- 09187960
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- NDL BIB ID
- 033676471
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- Text Lang
- en
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- Data Source
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- JaLC
- NDL Search
- Crossref
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- Abstract License Flag
- Disallowed