The Origins of Agriculture: New Data, New Ideasстатья из журнала
Аннотация: This introduction to the symposium and to this issue of Current Anthropology attempts to provide some sense of the topic, the meeting itself, the participants, and some of the initial results. Our symposium brought together a diverse international group of archaeological scientists to consider a topic of common interest and substantial anthropological import—the origins of agriculture. The group included individuals working in most of the places where farming began. This issue is organized by chronology and geography. Our goal was to consider the most recent data and ideas from these different regions in order to examine larger questions of congruity and disparity among the groups of first farmers. There is much new information from a number of important areas, particularly Asia. Following a review of the history of investigation of agricultural origins, this introduction summarizes the results of the conference. There are at least 10 different places around the world where agriculture was independently developed, and the antiquity of domestication is being pushed back in time with new discoveries. Our symposium has emphasized the importance of a multidisciplinary approach to such large questions in order to assemble as much information as possible. We anticipate that the results and consequences of this symposium will have long-term ripple effects in anthropology and archaeology.
Год издания: 2011
Авторы: T. Douglas Price, Ofer Bar‐Yosef
Издательство: University of Chicago Press
Источник: Current Anthropology
Ключевые слова: Pacific and Southeast Asian Studies, Archaeology and ancient environmental studies, Rangeland Management and Livestock Ecology
Открытый доступ: closed
Том: 52
Выпуск: S4
Страницы: S163–S174