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Featured researches published by Jennifer Bates.


Current Anthropology | 2017

Adaptation to Variable Environments, Resilience to Climate Change: Investigating Land, Water and Settlement in Indus Northwest India

Cameron A. Petrie; Ravindra N. Singh; Jennifer Bates; Yama Dixit; Charly A. I. French; David A. Hodell; Penelope J. Jones; Carla Lancelotti; Frank Lynam; Sayantani Neogi; Arun K. Pandey; Danika Parikh; Vikas Pawar; David Redhouse; Dheerendra P. Singh

This paper explores the nature and dynamics of adaptation and resilience in the face of a diverse and varied environmental and ecological context using the case study of South Asia’s Indus Civilization (ca. 3000–1300 BC). Most early complex societies developed in regions where the climatic parameters faced by ancient subsistence farmers were varied but rain falls primarily in one season. In contrast, the Indus Civilization developed in a specific environmental context that spanned a very distinct environmental threshold, where winter and summer rainfall systems overlap. There is now evidence to show that this region was directly subject to climate change during the period when the Indus Civilization was at its height (ca. 2500–1900 BC). The Indus Civilization, therefore, provides a unique opportunity to understand how an ancient society coped with diverse and varied ecologies and change in the fundamental environmental parameters. This paper integrates research carried out as part of the Land, Water and Settlement project in northwest India between 2007 and 2014. Although coming from only one of the regions occupied by Indus populations, these data necessitate the reconsideration of several prevailing views about the Indus Civilization as a whole and invigorate discussion about human-environment interactions and their relationship to processes of cultural transformation.


PLOS ONE | 2017

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

Xinyi Liu; Diane L. Lister; Zhijun Zhao; Cameron A. Petrie; Xiongsheng Zeng; Penelope J. Jones; Richard A. Staff; Anil K. Pokharia; Jennifer Bates; Ravindra N. Singh; Steven A Weber; Giedre Motuzaite Matuzeviciute; Guanghui Dong; Haiming Li; Hongliang Lu; Hongen Jiang; Jianxin Wang; Jian Ma; Duo Tian; Guiyun Jin; Liping Zhou; Xiaohong Wu; Martin Jones

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.


Vegetation History and Archaeobotany | 2017

Exploring Indus crop processing: combining phytolith and macrobotanical analyses to consider the organisation of agriculture in northwest India c. 3200–1500 bc

Jennifer Bates; R.N. Singh; Cameron A. Petrie

This paper presents a preliminary study combining macrobotanical and phytolith analyses to explore crop processing at archaeological sites in Haryana and Rajasthan, northwest India. Current understanding of the agricultural strategies in use by populations associated with South Asia’s Indus Civilisation (3200–1900 bc) has been derived from a small number of systematic macrobotanical studies focusing on a small number of sites, with little use of multi-proxy analysis. In this study both phytolith and macrobotanical analyses are used to explore the organisation of crop processing at five small Indus settlements with a view to understanding the impact of urban development and decline on village agriculture. The differing preservation potential of the two proxies has allowed for greater insights into the different stages of processing represented at these sites: with macrobotanical remains allowing for more species-level specific analysis, though due to poor chaff presentation the early stages of processing were missed; however these early stages of processing were evident in the less highly resolved but better preserved phytolith remains. The combined analyses suggests that crop processing aims and organisation differed according to the season of cereal growth, contrary to current models of Indus Civilisation labour organisation that suggest change over time. The study shows that the agricultural strategies of these frequently overlooked smaller sites question the simplistic models that have traditionally been assumed for the time period, and that both multi-proxy analysis and rural settlements are deserving of further exploration.


Antiquity | 2016

Feeding ancient cities in South Asia: dating the adoption of rice, millet and tropical pulses in the Indus civilisation

Cameron A. Petrie; Jennifer Bates; Thomas Higham; R.N. Singh

Abstract The first direct absolute dates for the exploitation of several summer crops by Indus populations are presented here. These include rice, millets and three tropical pulse species at two settlements in the hinterland of the urban site of Rakhigarhi. The dates confirm the role of native summer domesticates in the rise of Indus cities. They demonstrate that, from their earliest phases, a range of crops and variable strategies, including multi-cropping, were used to feed different urban centres. This has important implications for understanding the development of the earliest cities in South Asia, particularly the organisation of labour and provisioning throughout the year.


Journal of World Prehistory | 2017

‘Multi-cropping’, Intercropping and Adaptation to Variable Environments in Indus South Asia

Cameron A. Petrie; Jennifer Bates

Past human populations are known to have managed crops in a range of ways. Various methods can be used, singly or in conjunction, to reconstruct these strategies, a process which lends itself to the exploration of socio-economic and political themes. This paper endeavours to unpack the concept of ‘multi-cropping’ by considering diversity and variation in the cropping practices of the populations of South Asia’s Indus Civilisation. It argues that nuanced interpretations of the evidence provided by the combinations of crop seeds and weeds present in specific contexts and phases of occupation can reveal much about Indus cropping strategies, which in turn enables consideration of issues related to adaptation, intensification and resilience in the face of changing social, political, economic and environmental climates.


Quaternary International | 2016

The virtues of small grain size: Potential pathways to a distinguishing feature of Asian wheats

Xinyi Liu; Diane L. Lister; Zhijun Zhao; Richard A. Staff; Penelope J. Jones; Liping Zhou; Anil K. Pokharia; Cameron A. Petrie; Anubha Pathak; Hongliang Lu; Giedre Motuzaite Matuzeviciute; Jennifer Bates; Thomas K. Pilgram; Martin Jones


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2017

Approaching rice domestication in South Asia: New evidence from Indus settlements in northern India

Jennifer Bates; Cameron A. Petrie; R.N. Singh


Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences | 2018

Cereals, calories and change: exploring approaches to quantification in Indus archaeobotany

Jennifer Bates; Cameron A. Petrie; R.N. Singh


(2017) | 2017

The Archaeobotany of Aşvan Environment and Cultivation in Eastern Anatolia from the Chalcolithic to the Medieval Period

M Nesbitt; Jennifer Bates; S Mitchell; G Hillman


Archive | 2016

Phytolith Analysis and the Indus Civilisation: A Review

Jennifer Bates; Cameron A. Petrie

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R.N. Singh

Banaras Hindu University

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Martin Jones

University of Cambridge

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Anil K. Pokharia

Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeobotany

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Xinyi Liu

Washington University in St. Louis

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