Preserved ancient botanical evidence in the form of rice phytoliths has confirmed that people farmed domesticated rice (Oryza sativa) in the interior of Sulawesi Island, Indonesia, by at least 3,500 years ago. This discovery helps to resolve a mystery about one of the region's major events in natural and cultural history, by documenting when rice farming spread into Indonesia, ultimately from a source in mainland China. At the Minanga Sipakko site in Sulawesi, preserved leaf and husk phytoliths of rice show the diagnostic morphology of domesticated varieties, and the discarded husks indicate on-site processing of the crops. The phytoliths were contained within an undisturbed, subsurface archaeological layer of red-slipped pottery, a marker ...
AbstractBaligang is a Neolithic site with a long occupation, from before 6300BC up to the first mill...
This paper discusses the origins of Oryza sativa japonica rice cultivation in the Yangzi region of C...
We have compiled an extensive database of archaeological evidence for rice across Asia, including 40...
Accelerator Mass Spectrometry radiocarbon dates for rice husks and grains embedded in the fabric of ...
This article sets out the first direct evidence for the central role of rice cultivation in the orig...
The origins of dry farming in the Southeast Asian tropics have been neglected until recently. Inform...
The earliest claim for domesticated rice in Island Southeast Asia (4960–3565 cal BP) derives from a ...
Although historic and linguistic sources indicate that the indigenous Mariana Islanders of Micronesi...
Neolithic rice remains were recovered from a mixed rice–millet farming area in China outside the ori...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer Nature via the ...
The archaeology of rice has made important methodological advances over the past decade that have co...
Recent research on the eastern margins of the Bangkok Plain in central Thailand has identified a ser...
The long process of rice domestication likely started 10,000–8,000 years ago in China, and the pre-e...
Asiatic Rice Oryza sativa L. (Poaceae) is a domesticated grain crop native to the tropical and subtr...
The history of rice (Oryza sativa) cultivation in North China is ambiguous owing to a lack of eviden...
AbstractBaligang is a Neolithic site with a long occupation, from before 6300BC up to the first mill...
This paper discusses the origins of Oryza sativa japonica rice cultivation in the Yangzi region of C...
We have compiled an extensive database of archaeological evidence for rice across Asia, including 40...
Accelerator Mass Spectrometry radiocarbon dates for rice husks and grains embedded in the fabric of ...
This article sets out the first direct evidence for the central role of rice cultivation in the orig...
The origins of dry farming in the Southeast Asian tropics have been neglected until recently. Inform...
The earliest claim for domesticated rice in Island Southeast Asia (4960–3565 cal BP) derives from a ...
Although historic and linguistic sources indicate that the indigenous Mariana Islanders of Micronesi...
Neolithic rice remains were recovered from a mixed rice–millet farming area in China outside the ori...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Springer Nature via the ...
The archaeology of rice has made important methodological advances over the past decade that have co...
Recent research on the eastern margins of the Bangkok Plain in central Thailand has identified a ser...
The long process of rice domestication likely started 10,000–8,000 years ago in China, and the pre-e...
Asiatic Rice Oryza sativa L. (Poaceae) is a domesticated grain crop native to the tropical and subtr...
The history of rice (Oryza sativa) cultivation in North China is ambiguous owing to a lack of eviden...
AbstractBaligang is a Neolithic site with a long occupation, from before 6300BC up to the first mill...
This paper discusses the origins of Oryza sativa japonica rice cultivation in the Yangzi region of C...
We have compiled an extensive database of archaeological evidence for rice across Asia, including 40...