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Chronology and Plant Utilization from the Earliest Walled Settlement in the Hexi Corridor, Northwestern China

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 June 2019

Fengwen Liu
Affiliation:
MOE Key Laboratory of Western China’s Environmental System, College of Earth & Environmental Sciences, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, Gansu Province, 730000, China
Haiming Li
Affiliation:
MOE Key Laboratory of Western China’s Environmental System, College of Earth & Environmental Sciences, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, Gansu Province, 730000, China
Yifu Cui
Affiliation:
MOE Key Laboratory of Western China’s Environmental System, College of Earth & Environmental Sciences, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, Gansu Province, 730000, China
Yishi Yang
Affiliation:
Gansu Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, Lanzhou, Gansu Province, 730000, China
Harry F Lee*
Affiliation:
Department of Geography and Resource Management, TheChinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, New Territories, Hong Kong
Detian Ding
Affiliation:
History & Culture school ofLanzhou University, Lanzhou, Gansu Province, 730000, China
Yunguang Hou
Affiliation:
Jinchuan Cultural Relics Administration, Jinchang, Gansu Province, 737100, China
Guanghui Dong*
Affiliation:
MOE Key Laboratory of Western China’s Environmental System, College of Earth & Environmental Sciences, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, Gansu Province, 730000, China
*
*Corresponding author. Emails: harrylee@cuhk.edu.hk; ghdong@lzu.edu.cn.
*Corresponding author. Emails: harrylee@cuhk.edu.hk; ghdong@lzu.edu.cn.
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Abstract

The development and subsistence strategies adopted in ancient settlements are crucial to the understanding of long-term human–environmental interaction in the past. Here, we reassess the chronology of the ancient walled settlement of Sanjiao in the Hexi Corridor in northwestern China through accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon (AMS 14C) dating and explore the subsistence of the settlers inside through the identification of carbonized seeds and charcoal. In addition, high-resolution paleoclimate records in the Hexi Corridor and nearby regions are employed to explore the reason for the construction of Sanjiao. Our results show that Sanjiao was built around 828 cal BC and remained inhabited through 384–116 cal BC. This indicates Sanjiao is the earliest known walled settlement in the Hexi Corridor. Ancient people at Sanjiao consumed crops such as barley, broomcorn millet, and foxtail millet, and used wood from Tamarix chinensis, Tamarix, Salix, Picea, Hippophae, Betulaceae, and Poaceae as fuel. The construction date of Sanjiao correlates with climate deterioration and social upheavals in the Hexi Corridor, potentially suggesting a defensive purpose for the site.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© 2019 by the Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona
Figure 0

Table 1 Radiocarbon dates from Sanjiao.

Figure 1

Figure 1 The distribution of ancient walled settlements in China and the Hexi Corridor: yellow squares represent the walled settlements built in the Han Dynasty; red squares represent the walled settlements built before the Han Dynasty; the star represents the Sanjiao walled settlement. (Please see electronic version for color figures.)

Figure 2

Figure 2 Remote-sensing image and photographs of Sanjiao: remote-sensing image of Sanjiao; (B) photograph of the whole Sanjiao walled settlement; (C) and (D) the walls of Sanjiao from which the charcoal samples are collected (white dots).

Figure 3

Figure 3 The comparison of the probability of 14C dates from Sanjiao and the tombs nearby: the red ones represent the LSC dates of dead wood from Hamudun and Xigang tombs by Xie (2002); the orange ones refer to the LSC dates of charcoal from test pit in Sanjiao by Xie (2002); the yellow ones are the AMS dates of charcoal from the walls in Sanjiao (this study); the green ones are the AMS dates of barley from the Shajing cultural layers inside Sanjiao (this study).

Figure 4

Figure 4 The modeled age ranges of Sanjiao’s walls and their median: the start boundary of wall construction is shown with 68.2% and 95.4% probability range.

Figure 5

Figure 5 Charred seed remains from Sanjiao: (A) Hordeum vulgare; (B) Panicum miliaceum; (C) Setaria italica; (D) Setaria viridis (L.)Beauv.; (E) Nitraria sibirica Pall.; (F) Iris lacteal pall. var.; (G) Agriophyllum squarrosum (L.)Moq.; (H) Sphaerophysa salsula; (I) Salsola collina Pall. (J) Echinochloa crus galli (L.)Beauv.; (K) Geranium carolinanum L.; (L) Polygonum lapathifolium L.

Figure 6

Table 2 Taxa of charred plant seeds and their total number and relative frequencies from Sanjiao.

Figure 7

Figure 6 Fossilized charcoals identified in Sanjiao: (A1, B1, and C1) Tamarix L.; (A2, B2, and C2) Salix L.; (A3, B3, and C3) Picea; (A4, B4, and C4) Hippophae. A is the transverse section of charcoal; B is the radial section of charcoal; C is the tangential section of charcoal.

Figure 8

Table 3 Taxa of charcoal and their relative frequencies and abundance ratio from Sanjiao.

Figure 9

Figure 7 Comparison between the probability of 14C dates from Sanjiao and the paleo-climatic records in the Hexi Corridor and its nearby regions: (a) temperature anomaly of the North Hemisphere (30–90°N) by Marcott et al. (2013) (purple); (b) δ18O temperature anomaly of Agassiz cap on Ellesmere Island by Lecavalier et al. (2017) (red, smoothed with the Gaussian filter [σ = 50y]); (c) Asia monsoon record of the stalagmite from Dongge Cave by Dykoski et al. (2005); (d) annual precipitation reconstructed from tree-ring in eastern Qilian Mountains by Yang et al. (2014); (e) probability of 14C dates from Sanjiao (orange). The yellow circle represents the dates of Sanjiao obtained in this study. The gray shadow indicates the periods of climate deterioration.