Xishanping

Xishanping
西山坪
Location in China
Location in China
Location Gansu, China
Region Tianshui Basin
Coordinates 34°33′50″N 105°32′41″E / 34.56389°N 105.54472°E / 34.56389; 105.54472Coordinates: 34°33′50″N 105°32′41″E / 34.56389°N 105.54472°E / 34.56389; 105.54472
Altitude 1,330 m (4,364 ft)[1]
Area 204,800 m2 (2,204,449 sq ft)
History
Founded ca. 7800 BP
Abandoned ca. 3000 BP
Periods Neolithic, Bronze Age
Cultures Dadiwan culture,
Lower Beishouling culture,
Majiayao culture,
Qijia culture
Site notes
Excavation dates 1956, 1986-1990[2]
Archaeologists Pei Wenzhong

Xishanping is an archaeological site in Gansu, China, located 15 km (9 mi) west of Tianshui. The site was occupied continuously from the Neolithic through the Bronze Age. The site is situated about 50 m (160 ft) above the riverbed on the southern bank of the Xi River, a tributary of the Wei River.[2] The site was discovered by Pei Wenzhong in 1947.[3]

Stratigraphy

Staple crops

Xishanping was the site of a highly diverse and complex agriculture system, showing the earliest largest diversity of staple crops found in China. From 4650-3000 BP, eight major staple crops were found together at Xishanping: wheat (Triticum aestivum), barley and oat (all three introduced from Western Asia); rice (introduced from eastern China); foxtail millet, broomcorn millet, buckwheat and soybean.[1] As such, Xishanping is the earliest site for the introduction of several Western Asia staple crops to China, likely via the Hexi Corridor.[1][5] Despite the diversity, the people at Xishanping still relied primarily on rainfed agriculture.[3]

The earliest dates for each crop found at Xishanping are as follows:

The first appearance of wheat in East Asia coincides with the first appearance of broomcorn millet in Central Asia at Begash, Kazakhstan (4450–4100 BP).[6]

Notes

Bibliography

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/16/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.