2022
DOI: 10.1177/09596836221131689
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Archaeobotanical evidence of plant cultivation from the Sanbaopi site in south-western Taiwan during the Late Neolithic and Metal Age

Abstract: Despite decades of lively debate about Taiwan’s role in the spread of early agriculture, crops and cultivation practices to the Indo-Pacific region, there is little archaeobotanical data from the island. Here we present the first directly dated and systematically analysed macrobotanical records from Taiwan obtained by flotation at the archaeological site Sanbaopi 5 (23°07′03′′N, 120°15′32′′E), representing the Dahu (1400 BCE–100 CE) and Niaosong (100–1400 CE) culture periods. The results suggest that Middle Da… Show more

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“…Therefore, the arrival of foxtail millet in Europe is thought to postdate broomcorn millet by centuries. This contrasts with the pattern observed in East Asia, where broomcorn and foxtail millets tend to be introduced to a region simultaneously [15][16][17][38][39][40]. However, in Southeast Asia, current evidence suggests that foxtail millet predates broomcorn [41].…”
Section: Chronologies Of Western Dispersals Of Asian Milletsmentioning
confidence: 75%
“…Therefore, the arrival of foxtail millet in Europe is thought to postdate broomcorn millet by centuries. This contrasts with the pattern observed in East Asia, where broomcorn and foxtail millets tend to be introduced to a region simultaneously [15][16][17][38][39][40]. However, in Southeast Asia, current evidence suggests that foxtail millet predates broomcorn [41].…”
Section: Chronologies Of Western Dispersals Of Asian Milletsmentioning
confidence: 75%