Abstract

Despite the proposed climate–human connection in the West Liao River Basin during the Bronze Age, the question of how climate change could have affected the subsistence strategies, and consequently, the cultural transformation from the Lower Xiajiadian to the Upper Xiajiadian periods, has never been systematically explored. Based on radiocarbon dating and the analysis of plant remains recovered by flotation, as well as the spatial distribution of archaeological sites, this study investigates the subsistence strategies of ancient people and their influence on cultural development in the West Liao River Basin during the Lower Xiajiadian (3900–3400 cal. yr BP) and Upper Xiajiadian periods (3000–2500 cal. yr BP). Carbonized seeds collected from 13 archaeological sites reveal that people engaged in millet-based agriculture in this area throughout the Bronze Age. Favorable climate during the Holocene Optimum promoted millet farming among the Lower Xiajiadian Culture. The end of the Holocene Optimum and its associated climate deterioration led to agricultural shrinkage in the Upper Xiajiadian period, which is revealed by the reduced amount of carbonized millet seeds and the ratio between foxtail millet and broomcorn millet. Climate deterioration led to diverse subsistence strategies, resulting in the dispersal of human settlements and the differentiation of the spatial distributions of different groups. People with millet-based subsistence strategies retreated southward, while people with animal husbandry and hunting-based subsistence strategies migrated westward. The above findings may offer insights in comprehending how climate deterioration could have affected the multi-facets of human societies in the West Liao River Basin, which is a climatically sensitive region, in Chinese prehistory.

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