Abstract
While the significance of the Yangshao culture in early China is widely recognized, systematic and detailed analysis and discussion of its subsistence strategy are lacking, especially for faunal materials. This paper examines the new and crucial faunal remains that include 3,400 identified specimens from the Miaodigou site unearthed in 2002. At that site, pig husbandry was predominant and wild animals were occasionally hunted as supplemental resources. In combination with published research including zooarchaeology, paleoethnobotany, and carbon and nitrogen stable isotope studies of 29 other sites mainly from the Guanzhong area and western Henan, we argue that subsistence strategy underwent a comprehensive and profound transformation during the middle period of Yangshao culture, namely Miaodigou period, as crop production and pig husbandry flourished in a wide range of areas. Domestic pigs accounted for over 80% of mammals, reaching an unprecedented proportion in the Neolithic age and manifesting a high level of consistency in feeding and slaughtering, and foxtail millet replaced broomcorn to become the most important crop at all sites, both of which demonstrate the breadth and depth of this transformation. The tension between the deterioration of climate, the decrease of surrounding wildlife resources due to excessive development and the continuous growth of the population may have contributed to this transformation. This study enriches our understanding of human-environment interactions in the embryonic stage of Chinese civilization and triggers further thoughts on how culture, society, the environment and subsistence were entangled in the development of civilization.
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