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WILD MAMMALS OF ANCIENT NORTH CHINA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 April 2018

Brian Lander
Affiliation:
email: brian_lander@brown.edu
Katherine Brunson
Affiliation:
katherine_brunson@brown.edu

Abstract

Human activity has eliminated many of the natural lowland ecosystems of the Middle and Lower Yellow River Valley, and has modified the rest, making it difficult to understand what species are native to the region. As a step towards the reconstruction of these lost environments, this paper employs zooarchaeological and other evidence to identify the native mammals of the region. We provide basic ecological information about these animals and discuss controversial or difficult cases in more depth. Our goal is not only to study China's environmental history, but also to make clear that conventional understandings of species ranges are based on the distributions of animals in the modern period, when many had already been eliminated from large areas by human activity.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2018 

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Footnotes

The authors are grateful for postdoctoral fellowships from the Harvard University Center for the Environment, the Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, and the Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World at Brown University. We would like to thank Rowan Flad, John Major, Max Price, Andrew Smith and two anonymous reviewers for their comments.

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2 Our study region consists of Shaanxi, Shanxi, Henan, Shandong, and Hebei provinces, plus the Wei River basin in Gansu, and Beijing. While southern Shaanxi and Henan are not in the Yellow River Basin, the few sites from these regions did not include any species that were not common in sites further north, except for the giant panda and elephant remains at Xiawanggang, discussed below.

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14 The use, and size, of screen mesh has a significant effect on the types of animal remains uncovered during excavations: Quitmyer, Irvy, “What Kind of Data Are in the Back Dirt? An Experiment on the Influence of Screen Size on Optimal Data Recovery,” Archaeofauna 13 (2004), 109–29Google Scholar; Schaffer, Brian and Sanchez, Julia, “Comparison of ⅛″-and ¼″-Mesh Recovery of Controlled Samples of Small-to-Medium-Sized Mammals,” American Antiquity 59 (1994): 525–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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18 Another useful work has been Hutchins, Michael et al. , eds., Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia, 2nd ed. (Farmington Hills: Gale Group, 2003)Google Scholar.

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20 E.g., Riley, John L., The Once and Future Great Lakes Country: An Ecological History (Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queens University Press, 2013), 1419Google Scholar.

21 The forest musk deer (Moschus berezovskii) now lives only in high mountains and Siberian musk deer (M. moschiferus) is found only in the far north of the region. The remains found in the lowlands may belong to either of these, or perhaps to an extinct lowland species.

22 The earliest record we can find of people valuing the musk comes from the “Discourse on Nourishing the Body” (Yang shen lun 養身論) of Ji Kang 嵇康 (223–62 CE): https://zh.wikisource.org/zh-hant/養生論_(嵇康).

23 The head and pedicles (rounded furry horns from which small antlers grow on males) on some bronze vessels seem to depict a muntjac, while the rest of the animal contains fantastical elements, like wings. E.g., Zhongguo shehuikexueyuan kaogu yanjiusuo, Zhangjiapo Xi Zhou mudi 張家坡西周墓地 (Beijing: Dabaike quanshu, 1999), 161–63Google Scholar; 高功, Gao Gong, “Long xing cheng cang, lu ming zhou ye—Shigushan Xi Zhou mudi chutu qingtongqi shangxi (er) 龍行陳倉,鹿鳴周野—石鼓山西周墓地出土青銅器賞析(二),” Shoucangjie 4 (2015)Google Scholar.

24 Geist, Deer of the World, 84–85.

25 Kroll, Paul W., A Student's Dictionary of Classical and Medieval Chinese (Leiden: Brill, 2015; Pleco edition)Google Scholar. The same is true of Japanese, in which this character is pronounced “sika,” hence the English name.

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31 112 of 121 sites, about 93%.

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34 Photographs taken in the early twentieth century reveal that some domesticated pigs still looked quite wild: Sterling Clark, Robert and de Carle Sowerby, Arthur, Shen-Kan: The Account of the Clark Expedition in North China 1908–9 (London: T. Fisher Unwin, 1912), 137Google Scholar.

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39 Incidentally, another perissodactyl that may have inhabited the region is the tapir, which was found at Anyang, and seems also to be represented in ancient bronzes. However, Donald Harper argues that the tapir bones excavated at Anyang date to the Pleistocene, that the bronze vessels do not depict tapirs, and that there were no tapirs in China in historical times. de Chardin, Pierre Teilhard and Young, Chung Chien, On the Mammalian Remains from the Archaeological Site of Anyang (Nanking: Geological Survey of China, 1936)Google Scholar; Harper, Donald J., “The Cultural History of the Giant Panda (Ailuropoda melanoleuca) in Early China,” Early China 35 (2013): 186204Google Scholar.

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44 Aurochs bones have been identified at the Longshan site of Zhoujiazhuang in Shanxi Province dating to 2140–1745 cal BCE. Since the mtDNA haplogroups of both domestic cattle and wild aurochs were identified at that site, we know that both animals lived in the area at the time, and may have interbred: Brunson, Katherine et al. , “New Insights into the Origins of Oracle Bone Divination: Ancient DNA from Late Neolithic Chinese Bovines,” Journal of Archaeological Science 74 (2016): 3544CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

45 Recent zooarchaeological studies on water buffalo (Bubalus sp.) remains from China and South Asia have disproven the traditional view that water buffalo were first domesticated in Neolithic China. The results from several recent genetic studies of modern domesticated buffalo (Bubalus bubalis) are not consistent with each other, placing the original center of buffalo's domestication in South Asia, Southeast Asia, or China. Dongya Yang and colleagues analyzed DNA from water buffalo remains dated to 8000–3600 cal BP from Neolithic sites in North China. The phylogenetic analysis indicated that the ancient water buffalos were an extinct species, not the direct ancestor of modern domesticated water buffalo. Liu Li 劉莉, Dongya, Yang 楊東亞, and Xingcan, Chen 陳星燦, “Zhongguo jiayang shuiniu qiyuan chutan” 中國家養水牛起源初探, Kaogu xuebao 2 (2006), 141–76Google Scholar; Yang, Dongya et al. , “Wild or Domesticated: DNA Analysis of Ancient Water Buffalo Remains from North China,” Journal of Archaeological Science 35:10 (2008): 2778–85CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.

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49 悉率左右,以燕天子.既張我弓, 既挾我矢, 發彼小豝, 殪此大兕. “Ji ri” 吉日, Mao ode # 180. We have changed Karlgren's translation of si 兕 from “rhinoceros” to “buffalo” in accordance with Lefeuvre, Jean A., “Rhinoceros and Wild Buffaloes North of the Yellow River at the End of the Shang Dynasty: Some Remarks on the Graph and the Character 兕,” Monumenta Serica 39 (1990): 131–57CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Bishop, Carl W., “Rhinoceros and Wild Ox in Ancient China,” The China Journal 18.6 (1933): 322–30Google Scholar; Karlgren, Bernhard, The Book of Odes (Stockholm: Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities, 1950), 124Google Scholar.

50 如野牛而青. Hanyu da zidian 漢語大字典 (Wuhan: Hubei ci shu; Sichuan ci shu, 1986), 270.

51 Two other species of gazelle inhabit similar ecologies, and may have lived in the Guanzhong basin: Mongolian gazelle (Procapra gutturosa, 25–45 kg) and Przewalski's gazelle (Procapra przewalskii, 17–32 kg).

52 Hutchins et al., Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia Vol. 15, 249–57.

53 Orlando, Ludovic et al. , “Ancient DNA Analysis Reveals Woolly Rhino Evolutionary Relationships,” Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 28.3 (2003): 485–99CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Hutchins et al., Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia Vol. 16, 249.

54 Bones identified as rhinoceros or Sumatran rhinoceros were identified at Early and Middle Neolithic Dadiwan (Gansu), Middle Neolithic Guantaoyuan and Zijing (Shaanxi), Middle Neolithic Xiawanggang (Henan), Bronze Age Erlitou (Henan), and Bronze Age Anyang (Henan).

55 E.g., Bojun, Yang 楊伯峻, Chunqiu Zuo zhuan zhu 春秋左傳注 (Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1990), 192Google Scholar, 654 (Zhuang 13, Xuan 3).

56 For a mostly reliable, if dated, account of the history of elephants in China, see Wen, Zhongguo lishi shiqi zhiwu yu dongwu, 185–219.

57 Gansu sheng wenwu kaogu yanjiusuo, Qin'an Dadiwan: xinshiqi shidai yizhi fajue baogao 秦安大地灣: 新石器時代遺址發掘報告 (Beijing: Wenwu, 2006), 873. The northernmost site with clear evidence of wild elephants is Middle Neolithic period Xiawanggang, Henan, which is on the traditional border between North and South China.

58 There is some evidence for tamed elephants in the Shang-Zhou period: bowuguan, Hubei Sheng, Li yue Zhongguo: Hubei Sheng bowuguan guancang Shang Zhou qingtongqi tezhan 禮樂中國: 湖北省博物館館藏商周青銅器特展 (Wuhan: Hubei renmin chubanshe, 2014), 132Google Scholar; Fiskesjö, Magnus, “Rising From Blood-Stained Fields: Royal Hunting and State Formation in Shang China,” Bulletin of the Museum of Far Eastern Antiquities 73 (2001): 8698Google Scholar; Knoblock, John and Riegel, Jeffrey, The Annals of Lü Buwei: A Complete Translation and Study (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2000), 5.151Google Scholar.

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60 人希見生象也,而得死象之骨,案其圖以想其生也,故諸人之所以意想者皆謂之象也. Xianqian, Wang 王先謙, Han Feizi jijie 韓非子集解 (Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1998), 20.148Google Scholar.

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63 Yongzu, Zhang et al. , “Extinction of Rhesus Monkeys (Macaca mulatta) in Xinglung, North China,” International Journal of Primatology 10.4 (1989):375–81CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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65 Larger animals have been disproportionately extinguished globally over the Holocene: Turvey, Samuel T. and Fritz, Susanne A., “The Ghosts of Mammals Past: Biological and Geographical Patterns of Global Mammalian Extinction across the Holocene,” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences 366.1577 (2011): 2564–76CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed. This seems to reflect the fact that it is easier for smaller animals to adapt to environmental change.

66 The term shu 鼠 was used in early texts to refer to various small rodents.

67 Smith and Xie, Guide to the Mammals of China, 358–63.

68 Menzies, Nicholas, Science and Civilisation in China 6.3: Forestry, ed. Needham, Joseph (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996)Google Scholar.

69 These include Swinhoe's striped squirrel (Tamiops swinhoei), Pallas's squirrel (Callosciurus erythraeus), Eurasian red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) and Siberian flying squirrel (Pteromys volans).

70 The Daurian pika (Ochotona dauurica) inhabits the dry region to the northwest of the study region, but has also been found in the Qinling, where the most common species is the Qinling pika (O. syrinx). The taxonomy of these species is still being revised: Lissovsky, Andrey A., “Taxonomic Revision of Pikas Ochotona (Lagomorpha, Mammalia) at the Species Level,” Mammalia 78.2 (2014): 199216CrossRefGoogle Scholar. The identification of pikas at the Neolithic site of Banpo (in Xi'an) is probably a mistake.

71 E.g., Smith, Andrew T. and Foggin, J. Marc, “The Plateau Pika (Ochotona curzoniae) is a Keystone Species for Biodiversity on the Tibetan Plateau,” Animal Conservation 2 (1999), 235–40CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

72 Smith and Xie, Guide to the Mammals of China, 298.

73 Asian gray shrew (Crocidura attenuata), Asian lesser white-toothed shrew (Crocidura shantungensis), Chinese mole shrew (Anourosorex squamipes) and De Winton's shrew (Chodsigoa hypsibia).

74 Large mole (Mogera robusta) and short-faced mole (Scaptochirus moschatus).

75 Yellow throated (Martes flavigula) and possibly beech (M. foina) martens.

76 Steppe polecat (Mustela eversmanii) probably inhabited the region, and ermine (M. erminea) and mountain weasel (M. altaica) were probably found on its northern edges.

77 Major et al., Huainanzi, 582; Ning, He 何寧, ed., Huainanzi jishi 淮南子集釋 (Beijing: Zhonghua, 1998), 15.1046Google Scholar.

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79 Such as the large Indian civet (Viverra zibetha) and small Indian civet (Viverricula indica).

80 Vigne, Jean-Denis et al. , “Earliest ‘Domestic’ Cats in China Identified as Leopard Cat (Prionailurus bengalensis),” PLOS ONE 11.1 (2016): e0147295CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

81 Most notably the Asian golden cat (Catapuma temminicki): Smith and Xie, Guide to the Mammals of China, 392.

82 About 6% of sites from this period contained leopard remains and 16% had tiger remains.

83 Jacobson, Andrew P. et al. , “Leopard (Panthera pardus) Status, Distribution, and the Research Efforts across its Range,” PeerJ 4 (2016): e1974CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.

84 Smith and Xie, A Guide to the Mammals of China, 402.

85 Dan, Yu 于丹, “Tang xian Nanfangshui yizhi chutu dongwu yicun jianding baogao” 唐縣南放水遺址出土動物遺存監定報告,” in Tang xian Nanfangshui 唐縣南放水, ed. beidiao, Nanshui zhongxian qianxian gongcheng jianshe guanliju and Hubei sheng wenwuju (Beijing: Wenwu chubanshe, 2011), 197231Google Scholar.

86 Smith and Xie, Guide to the Mammals of China, 416–21.

87 Dhole have been found at Early Neolithic Dadiwan (Gansu), Middle Neolithic Gongjiawan, Jiangzhai, and Wuzhuangguoliang (Shaanxi), Late Neolithic Kangjia and Longgangcun (Shaanxi), and Shang/Zhou period Zhenjiangying (Beijing)

88 Schafer, Edward H., “Brief Note: The Chinese Dhole,” Asia Major 4.1 (1991): 16Google Scholar.

89 Thalmann, O. et al. , “Complete Mitochondrial Genomes of Ancient Canids Suggest a European Origin of Domestic Dogs,” Science 342.6160 (2013): 871–74CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Larson, G. and Bradley, D.G., “How Much Is That in Dog Years? The Advent of Canine Population Genomics,” PLoS Genetics 10.1 (2014): e1004093CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.

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91 As in North America, where they once lived as far south as Mexico.

92 On pandas in Chinese culture, see Harper, “The Cultural History of the Giant Panda.”

93 Trautmann, Thomas R., Elephants and Kings: An Environmental History (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Brian Lander, “Environmental Change and the Rise of the Qin Empire: A Political Ecology of Ancient North China” (PhD diss., Columbia University, 2015).

94 荊有雲夢,犀兕麋鹿滿之,江漢之魚鼈鼂鼉為天下富;宋所為(謂)無雉兔狐狸者也. Johnston, Ian, The Mozi: A Complete Translation (New York: Columbia University Press, 2010), 727Google Scholar; See also Qian, Sima 司馬遷, Shi ji 史記 (Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1959), 129.3266Google Scholar; Watson, Burton, Records of the Grand Historian: Han Dynasty Vol. 2 (Hong Kong: Renditions-Columbia University Press, 1993), 444Google Scholar.

95 Ho, Ping-ti, Studies on the Population of China, 1368–1953. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1959), 183–92CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

96 南海則有羽翮, 齒革, 曾青, 丹干焉, 然而中國得而財之…虎豹為猛矣然君子剥而用之. Xianqian, Wang 王先謙, Xunzi jijie 荀子集解 (Beijing: Zhonghua shuju, 1988), 9.161Google Scholar; Knoblock, John, Xunzi: A Translation and Study of the Complete Works (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1988)Google Scholar, vol. 2, 142.

97 Wen, Zhongguo lishi shiqi zhiwu yu dongwu.

98 Cervus hortulorum in many excavation reports.

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