Wheat was added as a new crop to the existing millet and rice based agricultural systems of China. Here we present 35 radiocarbon ages from wheat seeds collected from 18 sites between western (Xinjiang Province) and eastern (Henan Province) China. The earliest wheat ages cluster around 2100–1800 BCE in northern China's Hexi corridor of Gansu Province, where millet was already a well-established crop. Wheat first appears in Xinjiang and Henan about 300–400 years later, and perhaps a little earlier than this in Xinjiang, and we hypothesize that the likely route of wheat into China was via Russia through Gansu. © 2013, Elsevier Ltd
Wheat and barley evolved from large-seeded annual grasses in the arid, low latitudes of Asia; their ...
The evaluation of ancient crop production and its response to climate change is key to exploring the...
Grain-cooking traditions in Neolithic China have been characterised as a ‘wet’ cuisine based on the ...
Wheat was added as a new crop to the existing millet and rice based agricultural systems of China. H...
The earliest direct dates of wheat in East Asia come from Donghuishan in Gansu Province, China. Few ...
Today in China, hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum – common wheat or bread wheat) is one of the majo...
Evidence for cultivated wheat at 4650 cal. yr BP, as part of a broadening agricultural-based society...
The introduction of wheat into central China is thought to have been one of the significant contribu...
Recent emphasis on the recovery of plant remains from archaeological sites in East Asia permits an a...
Today, farmers in many regions of eastern Asia sow their barley grains in the spring and harvest the...
Today, farmers in many regions of eastern Asia sow their barley grains in the spring and harvest the...
Today, farmers in many regions of eastern Asia sow their barley grains in the spring and harvest the...
The crop types and agricultural characteristic are reconstructed using the archaeobiological proxies...
<div><p></p><p>This article explores the context of the long-distance translocation of crops in preh...
<p>Millets and rice were important for the demographic history of China. This review draws on curren...
Wheat and barley evolved from large-seeded annual grasses in the arid, low latitudes of Asia; their ...
The evaluation of ancient crop production and its response to climate change is key to exploring the...
Grain-cooking traditions in Neolithic China have been characterised as a ‘wet’ cuisine based on the ...
Wheat was added as a new crop to the existing millet and rice based agricultural systems of China. H...
The earliest direct dates of wheat in East Asia come from Donghuishan in Gansu Province, China. Few ...
Today in China, hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum – common wheat or bread wheat) is one of the majo...
Evidence for cultivated wheat at 4650 cal. yr BP, as part of a broadening agricultural-based society...
The introduction of wheat into central China is thought to have been one of the significant contribu...
Recent emphasis on the recovery of plant remains from archaeological sites in East Asia permits an a...
Today, farmers in many regions of eastern Asia sow their barley grains in the spring and harvest the...
Today, farmers in many regions of eastern Asia sow their barley grains in the spring and harvest the...
Today, farmers in many regions of eastern Asia sow their barley grains in the spring and harvest the...
The crop types and agricultural characteristic are reconstructed using the archaeobiological proxies...
<div><p></p><p>This article explores the context of the long-distance translocation of crops in preh...
<p>Millets and rice were important for the demographic history of China. This review draws on curren...
Wheat and barley evolved from large-seeded annual grasses in the arid, low latitudes of Asia; their ...
The evaluation of ancient crop production and its response to climate change is key to exploring the...
Grain-cooking traditions in Neolithic China have been characterised as a ‘wet’ cuisine based on the ...