AbstractNearly three decades ago, zooarchaeologists postulated that chicken husbandry was practiced in Northern China by ∼8.0 ka calBP. Recently, ancient mitogenome analyses of galliform remains suggested that Red jungle fowl (Gallus gallus) was already present in the Yellow River basin several millennia earlier, shortly after the onset of the Holocene. If these conclusions are correct, the origins of chicken domestication and husbandry in the region may have been spurred by agricultural innovations in the lower Yellow River basin including millet cultivation, pig husbandry, and dog breeding. In addition, the dispersal of poultry farming from East Asia to Asia Minor and Europe could therefore date to the Neolithic along ancient trade routes...
<div><p>Data from morphology, linguistics, history, and archaeology have all been used to trace the ...
The first remains of chicken, found in China, date from neolithic area (5 or 6,000 years ago). Throu...
Chicken were possibly domesticated in South and Southeast Asia. They occur ubiquitously in East Afri...
Though chickens are the most numerous and ubiquitous domestic bird, their origins, the circumstances...
Though chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) are globally ubiquitous today, the timing, location, and ...
Introduced into Europe during the Bronze- and Iron Ages as an exotic, non-native species, very littl...
Poultry are farmed globally, with chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus) being the leading domesticated ...
International audienceDomestic chickens have long been important to human societies for food, religi...
Despite the substantial role that chickens have played in human societies across the world, both the...
<div><p>Chicken is the most common poultry species and is important to human societies. Tibetan chic...
Human activities have precipitated a rise in the levels of introgressive gene flow among animals. Th...
The body of data based on new work on genetics and DNA, plus a growing number of radiocarbon ages wh...
Chicken is the most common poultry species and is important to human societies. Tibetan chicken (Gal...
The first 539 bases of mitochondrial DNA D-loop region of six Chinese native chicken breeds (Gallus ...
It is postulated that chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) became domesticated from wild junglefowls ...
<div><p>Data from morphology, linguistics, history, and archaeology have all been used to trace the ...
The first remains of chicken, found in China, date from neolithic area (5 or 6,000 years ago). Throu...
Chicken were possibly domesticated in South and Southeast Asia. They occur ubiquitously in East Afri...
Though chickens are the most numerous and ubiquitous domestic bird, their origins, the circumstances...
Though chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) are globally ubiquitous today, the timing, location, and ...
Introduced into Europe during the Bronze- and Iron Ages as an exotic, non-native species, very littl...
Poultry are farmed globally, with chicken (Gallus gallus domesticus) being the leading domesticated ...
International audienceDomestic chickens have long been important to human societies for food, religi...
Despite the substantial role that chickens have played in human societies across the world, both the...
<div><p>Chicken is the most common poultry species and is important to human societies. Tibetan chic...
Human activities have precipitated a rise in the levels of introgressive gene flow among animals. Th...
The body of data based on new work on genetics and DNA, plus a growing number of radiocarbon ages wh...
Chicken is the most common poultry species and is important to human societies. Tibetan chicken (Gal...
The first 539 bases of mitochondrial DNA D-loop region of six Chinese native chicken breeds (Gallus ...
It is postulated that chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) became domesticated from wild junglefowls ...
<div><p>Data from morphology, linguistics, history, and archaeology have all been used to trace the ...
The first remains of chicken, found in China, date from neolithic area (5 or 6,000 years ago). Throu...
Chicken were possibly domesticated in South and Southeast Asia. They occur ubiquitously in East Afri...