New evidence from archaeological investigations in north-east Thailand shows a transition in rice farming towards wetland cultivation that would have facilitated greater yields and surpluses. This evidence, combined with new dates and palaeoclimatic data, suggests that this transition took place in the Iron Age, at a time of increasingly arid climate, and when a number of broader societal changes become apparent in the archaeological record. For the first time, it is possible to relate changes in subsistence economy to shifts in regional climate and water-management strategies, and to the emergence of state societies in Southeast Asia
The origins of dry farming in the Southeast Asian tropics have been neglected until recently. Inform...
In the areas adjacent to the drowned Pleistocene continent of Sunda - present-day Mainland and Islan...
The recent discovery of continuous tree-ring series starting as early as 1030 CE has for the first t...
New evidence from archaeological investigations in north-east Thailand shows a transition in rice fa...
Regional environmental reconstruction is used to address the issue of human environmental relationsh...
The prehistoric archaeology of the Mun River floodplain, northeast Thailand, provides evidence for a...
Mortuary data from three Iron Age sites in Northeast Thailand and three in Northwest Cambodia are he...
The Iron Age of Mainland Southeast Asia began in the fifth century bc and lasted for about a millenn...
Recent research on the eastern margins of the Bangkok Plain in central Thailand has identified a ser...
Here we present a revised interpretation of pollen analyses at Iron Age archaeological sites on the ...
The pollen and phytolith analysis of a 20,000-year lake core from southern Thailand provides the fir...
The upper Mae Nam (River) Mun Valley of northeast Thailand has been occupied at least since the Bron...
Archaeobotanical research in East and Southeast Asia provides evidence for transitions between lower...
A priori Models and Thai Prehistory : A Reconsideration of the Beginnings of Agriculture in Southeas...
Human skeletal remains excavated in 1974-1975 at Ban Chiang, a premetal to Bronze/Iron Age site loca...
The origins of dry farming in the Southeast Asian tropics have been neglected until recently. Inform...
In the areas adjacent to the drowned Pleistocene continent of Sunda - present-day Mainland and Islan...
The recent discovery of continuous tree-ring series starting as early as 1030 CE has for the first t...
New evidence from archaeological investigations in north-east Thailand shows a transition in rice fa...
Regional environmental reconstruction is used to address the issue of human environmental relationsh...
The prehistoric archaeology of the Mun River floodplain, northeast Thailand, provides evidence for a...
Mortuary data from three Iron Age sites in Northeast Thailand and three in Northwest Cambodia are he...
The Iron Age of Mainland Southeast Asia began in the fifth century bc and lasted for about a millenn...
Recent research on the eastern margins of the Bangkok Plain in central Thailand has identified a ser...
Here we present a revised interpretation of pollen analyses at Iron Age archaeological sites on the ...
The pollen and phytolith analysis of a 20,000-year lake core from southern Thailand provides the fir...
The upper Mae Nam (River) Mun Valley of northeast Thailand has been occupied at least since the Bron...
Archaeobotanical research in East and Southeast Asia provides evidence for transitions between lower...
A priori Models and Thai Prehistory : A Reconsideration of the Beginnings of Agriculture in Southeas...
Human skeletal remains excavated in 1974-1975 at Ban Chiang, a premetal to Bronze/Iron Age site loca...
The origins of dry farming in the Southeast Asian tropics have been neglected until recently. Inform...
In the areas adjacent to the drowned Pleistocene continent of Sunda - present-day Mainland and Islan...
The recent discovery of continuous tree-ring series starting as early as 1030 CE has for the first t...