– 1500BC) was one of the most important Old World Bronze Age cultures. Located at the cross-roads of Asia, in modern Pakistan and India, it encompassed ca. one million square kilometers, making it one the largest and most ecologically, culturally, socially, and economically complex among contemporary civilisations. In this study, Jennifer Bates offers new insights into the Indus civilisation through an archaeobotanical reconstruction of its environment. Exploring the relationship between people and plants, agricultural systems, and the foods that people consumed, she demonstrates how the choices made by the ancient inhabitants were intertwined with several aspects of society, as were their responses to social and climate changes. Bates' book synthesizes the available data on genetics, archaeobotany, and archaeology. It shows how the ancient Indus serves as a case study of a civilization navigating sustainability, resilience and collapse in the face of changing circumstances by adapting its agricultural practices.
By:
Jennifer Bates (Seoul National University) Imprint: Cambridge University Press Country of Publication: United Kingdom Dimensions:
Height: 260mm,
Width: 182mm,
Spine: 26mm
Weight: 950g ISBN:9781009424448 ISBN 10: 1009424440 Pages: 398 Publication Date:02 January 2025 Audience:
College/higher education
,
Further / Higher Education
Format:Hardback Publisher's Status: Active
1. Introduction; 2. The Paleoenvironmental context; 3. Laying the groundwork; 4. Southwest Asian crops and their significance; 5. Big millets; 6. Small Millets; 7. Rice; 8. Tropical pulses and the identification of local domestication processes; 9. Microfossils and the multi-proxy approach; 10. Beyond 'staples'; 11. Crop processing and social organization; 12. Cropping strategies and seasonality; 13. Irrigation and intensification; 14. Indus indentities and food; 15. The 'Late Harappan Revolution'; 16. The burnt remains.
Jennifer Bates is Assistant Professor of Archaeological Science at Seoul National University. She is a co-author of The Archaeobotany of Asvan and Principal Investigator of the Indica Project.