Findings push back earliest known East-West interaction along Silk Road by 2,000 years
Charred grains of
barley, millet and wheat deposited nearly 5,000 years ago at campsites in the
high plains of Kazakhstan show that nomadic sheepherders played a surprisingly
important role in the early spread of domesticated crops throughout a
mountainous east-west corridor along the historic Silk Road, suggests new
research from Washington University in St. Louis.
"Our findings
indicate that ancient nomadic pastoralists were key players in an east-west
network that linked innovations and commodities between present-day China and
southwest Asia," said study co-author Michael Frachetti, PhD, an associate
professor of archaeology in Arts & Sciences at Washington University and
principal investigator on the research project.
"Ancient wheat
and broomcorn millet, recovered in nomadic campsites in Kazakhstan, show that
prehistoric herders in Central Eurasia had incorporated both regional crops
into their economy and rituals nearly 5,000 years ago, pushing back the
chronology of interaction along the territory of the 'Silk Road' more than
2,000 years," Frachetti said.
The study, to be
published April 2 in the Proceedings
of the Royal Society B,
establishes that several strains of ancient grains and peas had made their way
across Eurasia thousands of years earlier than previously documented.
While these crops
have been known to exist much earlier in ancient China and Southwest Asia,
finding them intermingled in the Bronze Age burials and households of nomadic
pastoralists provides some of the earliest concrete signs for east-west
interaction in the vast expanse of Eurasian mountains and the first botanical
evidence for farming among Bronze Age nomads.
Bread wheat,
cultivated at least 6,000 years ago in Southwest Asia, was absent in China
before 2500 B.C. while broomcorn millet, domesticated 8,000 years ago in China,
is missing in southwest Asia before 2000 B.C. This study documents that ancient
grains from eastern China and soutwest Asia had made their way to Kazakhstan in
the center of the continent by 2700-2500 B.C. (nearly 5,000 years ago).
"This study
starts to rewrite the model for economic change across Eurasia," said
first author Robert Spengler, PhD, a paleoethnobotanist and research associate
in Arts & Sciences at WUSTL.
"It
illustrates that nomads had diverse economic systems and were important for
reshaping economic spheres more generally."
Findings are based
on archaeobotanical data collected from four Bronze Age pastoralist campsites
in Central Eurasian steppe/mountains: Tasbas and Begash in the highlands of Kazakhstan
and Ojakly and Site 1211/1219 in Turkmenistan.
"This is one
of the first systematic applications of archaeobotany in the region, making the
potential for further future discovery very exciting," Spengler said.
Frachetti and a
team of WUSTL researchers led the on-site excavations, working closely with
archaeologists based in Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan and Italy. Spengler conducted
the paleoethnobotany laboratory work at WUSTL, under the directorship of Gayle
J. Fritz, PhD, professor of archaeology and expert in human-plant
relationships.
"Finding this diverse
crop assemblage at Tasbas and Begash illustrates first evidence for the
westward spread of East Asian and Southwest Asian crops eastward, and the
surprise is that it is nomads who are the agents of change," Frachetti
said.
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