Recent studies have shown that the proportion of rice bulliform phytoliths with >= 9 fish-scale decorations can be used as a criterion to differentiate wild rice from its domesticated counterpart. The analysis of rice bulliform phytoliths recovered from 38 samples collected from eight archaeological sites dated to around 10,000-2200 BP suggests that the process of rice domestication in the Lower Yangtze River region lasted for around 6000 years and can be divided into three stages. Stage I was from around 10,000 to 6500 BP. The process of domestication was very slow, and even went backwards. Stage II was between 6500 and 5600 BP, when the process was accelerated. During stage III, from 4500 to 2200 BP, the domestication process eventuall...
An exploratory phytolith analysis is applied at an archaeological site in central China to search fo...
<div><p>Baligang is a Neolithic site on a northern tributary of the middle Yangtze and provides a lo...
The adoption of cereal cultivation was one of the most important cultural processes in history, mark...
The process of rice domestication has been studied for decades based on changing morphological chara...
The process of rice domestication has been studied for decades based on changing morphological chara...
The process of rice domestication has been studied for decades based on changing morphological chara...
The process of rice domestication has been studied for decades based on changing morphological chara...
<div><p>Bulliform phytoliths play an important role in researching rice origins as they can be used ...
The cultivation of rice has had a major impact on both societies and their environments in Asia, and...
The history of rice (Oryza sativa) cultivation in North China is ambiguous owing to a lack of eviden...
The process of rice domestication occurred in the Lower Yangtze region of Zhejiang, China, between 6...
The archaeology of rice has made important methodological advances over the past decade that have co...
Neolithic rice remains were recovered from a mixed rice–millet farming area in China outside the ori...
Fossil rice phytoliths have been identi ed from a lateglacial to Holocene sequence of epicontinenta...
Baligang is a Neolithic site on a northern tributary of the middle Yangtze and provides a long archa...
An exploratory phytolith analysis is applied at an archaeological site in central China to search fo...
<div><p>Baligang is a Neolithic site on a northern tributary of the middle Yangtze and provides a lo...
The adoption of cereal cultivation was one of the most important cultural processes in history, mark...
The process of rice domestication has been studied for decades based on changing morphological chara...
The process of rice domestication has been studied for decades based on changing morphological chara...
The process of rice domestication has been studied for decades based on changing morphological chara...
The process of rice domestication has been studied for decades based on changing morphological chara...
<div><p>Bulliform phytoliths play an important role in researching rice origins as they can be used ...
The cultivation of rice has had a major impact on both societies and their environments in Asia, and...
The history of rice (Oryza sativa) cultivation in North China is ambiguous owing to a lack of eviden...
The process of rice domestication occurred in the Lower Yangtze region of Zhejiang, China, between 6...
The archaeology of rice has made important methodological advances over the past decade that have co...
Neolithic rice remains were recovered from a mixed rice–millet farming area in China outside the ori...
Fossil rice phytoliths have been identi ed from a lateglacial to Holocene sequence of epicontinenta...
Baligang is a Neolithic site on a northern tributary of the middle Yangtze and provides a long archa...
An exploratory phytolith analysis is applied at an archaeological site in central China to search fo...
<div><p>Baligang is a Neolithic site on a northern tributary of the middle Yangtze and provides a lo...
The adoption of cereal cultivation was one of the most important cultural processes in history, mark...