University of Tasmania
Browse
- No file added yet -

Journey to the east: Diverse routes and variable flowering times for wheat and barley en route to prehistoric China

Download (11.42 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-19, 13:11 authored by Liu, X, Lister, DL, Zhao, Z, Petrie, CA, Zeng, X, Penelope JonesPenelope Jones, Staff, RA, Pokharia, AK, Bates, J, Singh, RN, Weber, SA, Matuzeviciute, GM, Dong, G, Li, H, Lu, H, Jiang, H, Wang, J, Ma, J, Tian, D, Jin, G, Zhou, L, Wu, X, Jones, MK
Today, farmers in many regions of eastern Asia sow their barley grains in the spring and harvest them in the autumn of the same year (spring barley). However, when it was first domesticated in southwest Asia, barley was grown between the autumn and subsequent spring (winter barley), to complete their life cycles before the summer drought. The question of when the eastern barley shifted from the original winter habit to flexible growing schedules is of significance in terms of understanding its spread. This article investigates when barley cultivation dispersed from southwest Asia to regions of eastern Asia and how the eastern spring barley evolved in this context. We report 70 new radiocarbon measurements obtained directly from barley grains recovered from archaeological sites in eastern Eurasia. Our results indicate that the eastern dispersals of wheat and barley were distinct in both space and time. We infer that barley had been cultivated in a range of markedly contrasting environments by the second millennium BC. In this context, we consider the distribution of known haplotypes of a flowering-time gene in barley, Ppd-H1, and infer that the distributions of those haplotypes may reflect the early dispersal of barley. These patterns of dispersal resonate with the second and first millennia BC textual records documenting sowing and harvesting times for barley in central/eastern China.

History

Publication title

PLoS One

Volume

12

Issue

11

Article number

e0187405

Number

e0187405

Pagination

1-16

ISSN

1932-6203

Department/School

Menzies Institute for Medical Research

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Place of publication

United States

Rights statement

Copyright 2017 Liu et al. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Repository Status

  • Open

Socio-economic Objectives

Understanding past societies not elsewhere classified

Usage metrics

    University Of Tasmania

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC