Understanding the transport networks complex between South Asia, Southeast Asia and China during the late Neolithic and Bronze Age

Author:

Ma Minmin12ORCID,Lu Yongxiu12,Dong Guanghui12ORCID,Ren Lele3,Min Rui4,Kang Lihong4,Zhu Zhonghua4,Li Xiaorui4,Li Bo5,Yang Zhijian6,Cili Nongbu7,Liu Ruiliang8ORCID,Gao Yu9ORCID,Chen Fahu2910

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Western China’s Environmental System (Ministry of Education), Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, China

2. College of Earth & Environmental Sciences, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, China

3. School of History and Culture, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, China

4. Yunnan Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, Kunming, China

5. Tonghai Cultural Relics Management Institute, Yuxi, China

6. Yulong County Cultural Relics Management Institute, Lijiang, China

7. Deqin County Cultural Relics Management Institute, Diqing Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, China

8. The Department of Asia, British Museum, London, UK

9. Alpine Paleoecology and Human Adaptation Group (ALPHA), State Key Laboratory of Tibetan Plateau Earth System, Environment and Resources (TPESER), Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), Beijing, China

10. College of Resources and Environment, University of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China

Abstract

The emergence and intensification of transcontinental exchange during both the Late Neolithic and Bronze Age profoundly influenced the social history of Eurasia. While scholars have intensively discussed east-west long-distance communication along the proto-Silk Road, the north-south transport networks that connected China to South and Southeast Asia during the Late Neolithic and Bronze Age have attracted much less attention in the scholarly literature based on archeological science data. In this paper, we find new radiocarbon dates from 11 Neolithic and Bronze Age sites in northwestern and central Yunnan in Southwest China, a key entrance into South and Southeast Asia from China. Combined with previously published archeological records and radiocarbon dates, we attempt to disentangle and understand the timing and routes of the networks linking China to South and Southeast Asia during the Late Neolithic and Bronze Age. We propose three north-south land routes that played essential roles in the cultural exchanges in addition to the proto-Silk Road and maritime routes. This includes the trans-Himalayan routes, trans-Hengduan Mountain routes, and the trans-Yunnan–Guizhou Plateau routes. The north-south exchange between China and South and Southeast Asia probably emerged in the fifth millennium BP (before the present) mainly through a low-frequency trans-Yunnan–Guizhou Plateau and trans-Himalayan routes. The exchange frequency significantly increased after the fourth millennium BP, with the synchronous development of the three primary north-south passageways. Trans-Hengduan routes might have been the most crucial artery connecting China and South and Southeast Asia during 3000–2200 BP, but more archeological records are needed to understand the detailed evolution of these transport networks.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Paleontology,Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology,Archeology,Global and Planetary Change

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