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Research Article

Regional diversity on the timing for the initial appearance of cereal cultivation and domestication in southwest Asia

Amaia Arranz-Otaegui, Sue Colledge, Lydia Zapata, Luis Cesar Teira-Mayolini, and Juan José Ibáñez
PNAS December 6, 2016 113 (49) 14001-14006; first published December 6, 2016; https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1612797113
Amaia Arranz-Otaegui
aDepartment of Cross-Cultural and Regional Studies, University of Copenhagen, 2300 Copenhagen, Denmark;
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  • For correspondence: kch860@hum.ku.dk
Sue Colledge
bInstitute of Archaeology, University College London, London WC1H 0PY, United Kingdom;
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Lydia Zapata
cDepartment of Geography, Prehistory and Archaeology, University of the Basque Country–Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea, 01006 Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain;
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Luis Cesar Teira-Mayolini
dInstituto Internacional de Investigaciones Prehistóricas de Cantabria, 39005 Santander, Spain;
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Juan José Ibáñez
eConsejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, Instituto Milá y Fontanals, 08001 Barcelona, Spain
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  1. Edited by Melinda A. Zeder, National Museum of Natural History, Santa Fe, NM, and approved November 2, 2016 (received for review August 6, 2016)

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Significance

Recent studies show that cultivation of wild and domesticated plants was a protracted process that developed across southwest Asia. However, there have not been sufficient data to evaluate whether cereal cultivation and domestication developed in parallel in all the regions or at different times. Our findings indicate that cultivation of wild cereal forms during Pre-Pottery Neolithic A was common only in specific regions such as the southern-central Levant. Domesticated-type cereal chaff (>10%) is found in southern Syria around 10.7–10.2 ka Cal BP but appears around 400–1,000 y later in the other regions. Regionally diverse plant-based subsistence during the Pre-Pottery Neolithic could have contributed to (if not caused) chronological dissimilarities in the development of cereal cultivation and domestication in southwest Asia.

Abstract

Recent studies have broadened our knowledge regarding the origins of agriculture in southwest Asia by highlighting the multiregional and protracted nature of plant domestication. However, there have been few archaeobotanical data to examine whether the early adoption of wild cereal cultivation and the subsequent appearance of domesticated-type cereals occurred in parallel across southwest Asia, or if chronological differences existed between regions. The evaluation of the available archaeobotanical evidence indicates that during Pre-Pottery Neolithic A (PPNA) cultivation of wild cereal species was common in regions such as the southern-central Levant and the Upper Euphrates area, but the plant-based subsistence in the eastern Fertile Crescent (southeast Turkey, Iran, and Iraq) focused on the exploitation of plants such as legumes, goatgrass, fruits, and nuts. Around 10.7–10.2 ka Cal BP (early Pre-Pottery Neolithic B), the predominant exploitation of cereals continued in the southern-central Levant and is correlated with the appearance of significant proportions (∼30%) of domesticated-type cereal chaff in the archaeobotanical record. In the eastern Fertile Crescent exploitation of legumes, fruits, nuts, and grasses continued, and in the Euphrates legumes predominated. In these two regions domesticated-type cereal chaff (>10%) is not identified until the middle and late Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (10.2–8.3 ka Cal BP). We propose that the cultivation of wild and domesticated cereals developed at different times across southwest Asia and was conditioned by the regionally diverse plant-based subsistence strategies adopted by Pre-Pottery Neolithic groups.

  • plant domestication
  • agriculture
  • southwest Asia
  • Pre-Pottery Neolithic
  • archaeobotany

Footnotes

  • ↵1To whom correspondence should be addressed. Email: kch860{at}hum.ku.dk.
  • Author contributions: A.A.-O. and S.C. designed research; A.A.-O. performed research; A.A.-O. analyzed data; and A.A.-O., S.C., L.Z., L.C.T.-M., and J.J.I. wrote the paper.

  • The authors declare no conflict of interest.

  • This article is a PNAS Direct Submission.

  • This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1612797113/-/DCSupplemental.

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Regional diversity of cereal domestication in SWA
Amaia Arranz-Otaegui, Sue Colledge, Lydia Zapata, Luis Cesar Teira-Mayolini, Juan José Ibáñez
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Dec 2016, 113 (49) 14001-14006; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1612797113

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Regional diversity of cereal domestication in SWA
Amaia Arranz-Otaegui, Sue Colledge, Lydia Zapata, Luis Cesar Teira-Mayolini, Juan José Ibáñez
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences Dec 2016, 113 (49) 14001-14006; DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1612797113
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences: 113 (49)
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  • Biological Sciences
  • Anthropology

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    • Abstract
    • Cereal Cultivation vs. Wild Plant Gathering During the PPNA
    • Cultivation of Wild vs. Domesticated-Type Cereals During the PPNB
    • The Evidence of Cereal Domestication at Tell Qarassa North
    • The Regional Evidence for Cereal Domestication (Early/Middle Pre-Pottery Neolithic B)
    • Conclusions
    • Materials and Methods
    • SI Text: Summary of the Archaeobotanical Analyses at TQN
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