Back to Search
Start Over
Cereals, calories and change: exploring approaches to quantification in Indus archaeobotany
- Source :
- Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences
-
Abstract
- Several major cereal groups have been identified as staples used by the pre-urban, urban and post-urban phase populations of the Indus Civilisation (3200–1500 BCE): wheat, barley, a range of small hulled millets and also rice, though their proportional exploitation is variable across space and over time. Traditional quantification methods examine the frequency, intensity and proportionality of the use of these crops and help ascertain the ‘relative importance’ of these cereals for Indus populations. However, this notion of ‘importance’ is abstracted from the daily lives of the people using these crops and may be biased by the differential production (as well as archaeological survival) of individual cereals. This paper outlines an alternative approach to quantifying Indus cereals by investigating proportions of calories. Cereals are predominantly composed of carbohydrates and therefore provided much of the daily caloric intake among many late Holocene farming populations. The four major cereal groups cultivated by Indus farmers, however, vary greatly in terms of calories per grain, and this has an impact on their proportional input to past diets. This paper demonstrates that, when converted to proportions of calories, the perceived ‘importance’ of cereals from five Indus sites changes dramatically, reducing the role of the previously dominant small hulled millet species and elevating the role of Triticoid grains. Although other factors will also have affected how a farmer perceived the role and importance of a crop, including its ecological tolerances, investments required to grow it, and the crop’s role in the economy, this papers suggests that some consideration of what cereals meant in terms of daily lives is needed alongside the more abstracted quantification methods that have traditionally been applied.
- Subjects :
- 010506 paleontology
Archeology
Indus
Library science
South Asia
Research initiative
01 natural sciences
The arts
calories
Paleoethnobotany
Political science
0601 history and archaeology
Indus civilisation
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Bronze age
2. Zero hunger
Hinduism
060102 archaeology
Ecology
plant macroremains
06 humanities and the arts
15. Life on land
quantification
Anthropology
George (robot)
General partnership
Settlement (litigation)
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 18669565 and 18669557
- Volume :
- 10
- Issue :
- 7
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....2a9fc3970ec70ac61d326743071cf1ef
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-017-0489-2