Abstract

The emergence of houses is a social revolution around the world. Over the past several decades, Chinese archaeologists have excavated many Neolithic to Bronze Age houses, but there is still a great amount of uncertainty about the social and environmental factors driving the differences between these house structures in the Yellow River Basin. In this paper, we summarize data from excavation reports on the shape and size of Neolithic-Bronze Age houses in the upper, middle and lower reaches of the Yellow River, respectively, to identify some social and environmental factors that may have affected the development of house structures across northern China. Our results show that the shape and size of the houses developed at a different pace, but in general followed a similar developmental sequence: (1) 10–8 ka BP, the bud of settlements emerged in the middle and lower reaches of the Yellow River; (2) 8–7 ka BP, people started to construct small pithouses without walls; (3) 7–6 ka BP, people made medium-sized pithouses with low walls, and surface buildings were made with a wood skeleton and mud walls; (4) 6–5 ka BP, ultra-large houses emerged; (5) 5–4 ka BP, house form became more varied, including pithouses, cave dwellings and surface buildings with a wood skeleton mud wall, rammed earth wall, piled mud-grass mixed walls and adobe walls; and (6) 4–3 ka BP, original palaces emerged. Our analyses indicate that the environment played an essential role in determining the house changes over time and that the early to middle Holocene’s warm and humid climate provided excellent conditions for the emergence of settlements throughout the region. Due to the shortage of trees, people chose to change their house construction methods to accommodate the growing lumber shortage. In conclusion, the rapid shift in house construction methods reflects the changing ecological condition as well as a feedback cycle between the environment and social practices driven by resource limitations.

Highlights

  • IntroductionHouses are a fundamental part of sedentary agriculturalists’ lifeways

  • Around the world, houses are a fundamental part of sedentary agriculturalists’ lifeways

  • Different types of ancient houses appear in different areas and at a different spatial distribution, but in general experienced the following evolution process in the Yellow River

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Summary

Introduction

Houses are a fundamental part of sedentary agriculturalists’ lifeways. According to the current state of archaeological knowledge, it appears that the excavated along the upper, middle and lower reaches of the Yellow River, there is as of yet shape and structure of ancient houses have distinctive characteristics in different regions, no scientific analysis of the different dimensions or construction methods of these houses. Data we compare oursize results with availableAge paleoenvironIn this paper, collected on the shape and of Neolithic-Bronze houses to mental datasets to identify the interaction construction activities and environidentify when and how the house structures between changed in different areas of the Yellow Using these data, we compare our results with available paleoenvironmental datasets to identify the interaction between construction activities and environmental changes

The Development of Houses from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age in the Yellow
Archaeological cultural sequence the Neolithic-Bronze
Upper Yellow River Region
Middle Yellow River Region
Overall Characteristics of the Yellow River Basin
Environmental Impaction on House Evolution
Building Activity Impaction on Landscape
Findings
Conclusions
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