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Jiahu

Jiahu (Chinese: 賈湖; pinyin: Jiǎhú) was the site of a Neolithic settlement based in the central plain of ancient China, near the Yellow River. It is located between the floodplains of the Ni River to the north, and the Sha River to the south, 22 km (14 mi) north of the modern city of Wuyang, Henan Province.[1] Most archaeologists consider the site to be one of the earliest examples of the Peiligang culture. Settled around 7000 BC, the site was later flooded and abandoned around 5700 BC. The settlement was surrounded by a moat and covered a relatively large area of 55,000 square meters (5.5 hectare). At one time, it was "a complex, highly organized Chinese Neolithic society",[1] home to at least 250 people and perhaps as many as 800.

Jiahu
賈湖
Location in north China
LocationChina
RegionHenan
Coordinates33°36′47″N 113°40′01″E / 33.613°N 113.667°E / 33.613; 113.667
History
Foundedc. 7000 BC
Abandonedc. 5700 BC
CulturesPeiligang culture

The important discoveries of the Jiahu archaeological site include the Jiahu symbols, possibly an early example of proto-writing,[2] carved into tortoise shells and bones; the thirty-three Jiahu flutes carved from the wing bones of cranes, believed to be among the oldest playable musical instruments in the world; and evidence of alcohol fermented from rice, honey and hawthorn leaves.

A broad variety of other artifacts indicates a fairly advanced settlement for the early Neolithic period, including residences, burial sites, pottery kilns, an assortment of implements made of stone and earthenware, and a large central structure believed to be a communal workspace. To date, 45 residences have been excavated at Jiahu. Most of these are small, between four and ten meters. Most of these were semi-subterranean (partially dug into the earth) and with a single room; however, some of these had additional rooms built on later. Rubbish pits and storage cellars were also excavated, and nine pottery kilns were identified.

Discovery and excavation of the site edit

Discovered by Zhu Zhi in 1962, extensive excavation of the site did not occur until the 1980s. Most of the site still has not been excavated, although work is slowly progressing. The excavation of Jiahu burial sites and rubbish pits has been productive, yielding abundant evidence about the lives of the Jiahu people. Chinese researchers from the Henan Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, led for many years by Zhang Juzhong, a professor from the University of Science and Technology of China, have carried out archaeological research around the site for decades.

Zhang's team conducted excavation of portions of the site in seven stages; each stage took two to three years. A large portion of the Jiahu site was excavated in the first two phases of the project, between 1983 and 1987. Zhang and his assistants published the findings of the first two phases in detail in the journal Antiquity.

Jiahu and Peiligang edit

Some archaeologists point to cultural distinctions between Jiahu and Peiligang, as well as the distance: Jiahu is isolated, many kilometers south of the larger Peiligang grouping of over 100 archaeological sites in a fairly compact area. The distance would have represented a journey on foot of several days in the Neolithic era. This school of thought suggests that Jiahu and Peiligang represented separate, neighboring cultures that interacted and shared many characteristics. Other early Neolithic settlements in this part of the world were much farther south and east.

Archaeologists have divided Jiahu into three distinct phases. The oldest phase ranges from 7000 to 6600 BC; the middle phase ranges from 6600 to 6200 BC; and the last phase ranges from 6200 to 5700 BC.[1] The last two phases correspond to the Peiligang culture, while the earliest phase is unique to Jiahu.

Careful examination of the skeletons of over 400 individuals, removed from more than 300 graves, by several scientific teams over the course of the past 30 years illustrates that the Jiahu ethnic group was a part of the Northern Mongoloid group, and identified closely with the Miaodigou and Xiawanggang sub-groups which were also descendants of hunting and gathering tribes in Henan Province, and the Dawenkou, Xixiahou and Yedian sub-groups that were later found in Shandong Province.[1]

Agriculture, hunting, fishing and foraging edit

 
Red-crowned cranes in Hokkaido, Japan. Currently an endangered species, they were plentiful throughout the East Asia region in the Neolithic period and were hunted for meat; their wing bones were used to make the Jiahu flutes.

The inhabitants of Jiahu cultivated foxtail millet and rice. While millet cultivation is common in the Peiligang culture, rice cultivation at Jiahu is unique, and tends to support the theory that Jiahu was a separate culture from the Peiligang grouping. On the other hand, difference in local climate, moisture and soil conditions may have made cultivating rice in the Peiligang area more difficult. Jiahu rice cultivation is one of the earliest found, and the most northerly found at such an early stage in history. The rice was a kind of short-grained japonica rice. Scholars had previously thought the earliest domesticated rice belonged to the long-grain indica subspecies.

There is abundant proof of millet farming in cool, dry high latitudes of the Yellow River Valley, and rice farming dominated in warm, moist low latitudes of the Yangtze River Valley. The early Neolithic site of Jiahu lies near the boundary between the cool, dry north and the warm, moist south. In another sign of advancement, Jiahu's farmers had moved on from the usual slash-and-burn techniques of Neolithic farmers, and were using intensive cultivation in permanent fields.

Jiahu is also the site of the earliest find of wild soybean seeds in China; a large quantity of soybean remains were discovered at Jiahu.[3]

Food was plentiful, from farming as well as hunting and foraging, and contributed to considerable population growth for such an early settlement. Women of the Jiahu culture gathered wild pears and apricots, and foraged for acorns, chestnuts, broad beans, edible roots and tubers in the surrounding countryside. There is evidence of domesticated pigs, dogs, poultry, and small numbers of cattle. The Jiahu people used manure from their pigs and cattle as fertilizer, substantially increasing the yield of their rice crops. The livestock produced meat, milk and eggs. There was also evidence of deer, wild boar and rabbit hunting, and fishing in the nearby rivers to the north and south, with nets made of hemp fibers. The earliest evidence of Common carp aquaculture was also found at Jiahu.[4] The red-crowned crane, a large bird indigenous to the region, was hunted for meat; its bones and feathers were also used for other purposes.

Due to this steadily improving and varied diet, the health and longevity of the Jiahu people gradually improved. This has been documented through comparison of the archaeological evidence. Over 400 burials have been unearthed at Jiahu, and many hundreds more are believed to await excavation. Skeletons have been measured and carefully examined, revealing the height, weight, gender, and approximate age of each of the deceased Jiahu at the time of death, as well as the general health, and in many cases the cause of death. The three phases of Jiahu history correspond to steadily increasing numbers of middle-aged and older people, suggesting an increase in survival and life expectancy, and fewer remains of children and infants, suggesting a reduction in child and infant mortality. By the third phase, the average height of an adult had increased by two centimetres (34 in) and the bones and teeth were in significantly better condition.

Tools, fortifications and weapons edit

A stone sickle blade has been recovered. This was secured to a wooden handle to harvest grain. Evidence of baskets woven from wild grass has been uncovered. These were used to carry grain from the harvests. Remnants of a spinning loom have been found, indicating the production of cloth, probably from hemp fibers. Among the many tools and utensils unearthed at Jiahu are three-legged earthenware cooking pots with tight-fitting lids, and a variety of stone implements, including arrowheads, barbed harpoons, spades, axes, awls, and chisels.

Stone spearheads have also been found, and evidence of what may have been a wooden stockade fence along at least a portion of the interior shore of the moat. These improved weapons, and the moat surrounding the settlement, provided an ideal defense for such an early culture. The area is known to have been frequented by nomadic hunting and gathering tribes for several thousand years prior to the Jiahu settlement, and these may have been potential enemies, as well as the genetic forebears of Jiahu. The Jiahu people are not believed to have been warlike in nature, but capable of defending themselves if the need arose.

Thorough examination of the site has revealed no evidence of any armed conflict. Unearthed human remains showing signs of violent death are very rare, and scattered along the known timeline—rather than occurring at the same time which would indicate a battle. It is possible that the large size of the settlement, its substantial defenses, and the improved weapons of the Jiahu people may have caused potential enemies of that time to keep their distance. Such a scenario is consistent with the substantial growth in population and longevity exhibited by the Jiahu site. Without war, and with plenty of nutritious food, the village flourished.

Evidence of cultural development edit

After thorough study of 238 skeletal remains, Harvard University forensic archaeologist Barbara Li Smith published findings that the Jiahu villagers enjoyed fairly good health. The average age of death by the third phase was around 40, representing a very good life expectancy for Neolithic people. Sponge lesions on the skulls indicate that anemia and iron deficiency were a problem. Hole bone lesions from disease and parasitic infections were rare, although fecal evidence indicated the occasional presence of hookworm parasites, possibly from poorly cooked pork.

Ceremonial burial edit

The burials at Jiahu were usually accompanied by burial offerings, with increasing frequency as the second and third phases progressed. Burial objects range from pottery to tortoise shells. Burial offerings varied between individuals, and are believed to be linked to the skills they displayed in life, providing evidence of an early specialization of labor. The types of labor specialization, from most common to most rare, included farmers, herdsmen, fishermen, hunters, potters, musicians, and a tribal priest.

Most of the burials were earthen pits; infants were buried in earthenware jars. As is common with Neolithic communities, the burials were in cemeteries which were separate from the residential areas, although many gravesites overlapped, so they were probably not marked. A few burials were multiple, while most burial pits contained single individuals. These did not follow any discernible pattern, although it is possible that in some cases, couples (a man and a woman of roughly the same age) were buried together.

In some graves the heads were severed from the body and pointed toward the northwest. Cut marks made when the bones were fresh indicates the heads were cut off shortly after the person died. A few burial offerings included turquoise carvings, and represented a significant level of material wealth, suggesting some differences in social status. Burial offerings in women's graves were more sparse, indicating lower social status, and indicated that their roles were limited to childbearing and child care, cooking, and foraging for food.

Flutes edit

 
Gudi flute found at Jiahu, on display at the Henan Museum

Some of the most significant burial offerings discovered were playable tonal flutes made from red-crowned crane wing bones. This crane is 1.5 metres (5 ft) tall with a wingspan of 2.4 m (8 ft), yielding large bones for this purpose. The first of the flutes were found in the late 1980s, but were not described in the West until 1999.[5][6]

Thirty-three flutes—including around 20 intact flutes, several broken or fragmented ones, and several more unfinished ones—have been found at Jiahu. All are between 18 and 25 cm (7 and 10 in) in length.[6] It seems plausible that ancient flutes were also made from bamboo. Ancient myths described bamboo flutes; but no ancient ones have been found, in all likelihood because bamboo decays more quickly than bone and doesn't survive burial for thousands of years like bone.

The oldest phase at Jiahu only contains two flutes, which are tetratonic and pentatonic; the middle phase at Jiahu contains several flutes, including an interesting pair of hexatonic flutes.[7] One of the flutes was broken, and the other flute seems to be a replica of the first flute, as it shows evidence of adjustments made to match the pitch of the first. Innovations in the last phase include the use of heptatonic flutes.[7] The flutes were cut, smoothed at the ends, polished and finally drilled with a row of holes on one side. One of the broken flutes was repaired by drilling fourteen tiny holes along the breakage lines and then tying the sections together with hemp string.[7]

The flutes play in the so-called pentatonic scale, in which octaves are divided into five notes—the basis of many kinds of music, including Chinese folk music.[6][7] The fact that the flute has a scale indicates that its original players played music rather than just single notes. The flutes were probably used in some kind of ceremonial capacity, but may have been played for entertainment.

Pottery and fermented beverages edit

Jiahu yielded some of the oldest Chinese pottery yet found in Neolithic China. Patrick McGovern, of the University of Pennsylvania Museum, led a team of scientists who applied biomarker chemical analysis to pottery jars from Jiahu. They found signature molecules proving alcohol was fermented from rice, honey, grapes, and hawthorn. Researchers hypothesize that this hybrid beverage (a beer, wine, and mead combination) was fermented by the process of mold saccharification, a uniquely Chinese contribution to the art of beverage-making in which several mold species are used to break down the carbohydrates of rice and other grains into simple, fermentable sugars. Specific aromatic herbs and flowers such as chrysanthemum, in addition to tree resins such as China fir, had been added to the hybrid beverages, the researchers found. These aromatic additions, as well as the honey, indicate that fermented beverages with a pleasing aroma and sweet taste were important to the Jiahu people.[8]

Substantial quantities of rice and millet were stored in pottery jars, enabling the specialization of labor. Jiahu society is believed to have been fairly egalitarian, with several hundred residents of the village at the height of its development. Comparative DNA evidence from remains in the Jiahu settlement itself, as well as other evidence gathered, leads to speculation among researchers that there were one or more other ancient villages nearby, with peaceful interaction with the Jiahu in some form; but the sites of other villages nearby have not been located.

Inscribed symbols edit

 
Examples of Jiahu symbols

At Jiahu, archaeologists identified eleven markings of Jiahu symbols, also known as pictograms: nine on tortoise shells and two on bone, as possible evidence for proto-writing. The markings correspond to the middle phase. Some of the markings are quite similar to later Chinese characters; two of the most intriguing marks appear to be similar to later characters for eye () and sun (). However, correspondence of many early non-writing symbols with the Shang dynasty period oracle bone writing is to be expected, given the pictographic style of many of the Shang characters.

In later Chinese culture dating to around 3500 BC, tortoise shells were used as a form of divination. These were subjected to intense heat, and the cracks that formed were read as omens. The cracks were then carved as permanent marks on the surface of the shell. The evidence of shell pictograms from Jiahu may indicate that this tradition, or a related one, has much deeper roots in ancient Chinese culture than previously considered.

End of the village: a flood edit

Based on the archaeological evidence, a severe flood from the nearby rivers submerged most or all of the Jiahu settlement under a few feet of water sometime around 5700 BC. The inhabitants evacuated. It is not known where they went. The absence of tools and weapons in most of the residences indicates that they were able to salvage most of their belongings. They may have built a new village that has not been discovered, emigrated to the Peiligang villages, or scattered.

Zhang Juzhong imagines that they were led by their tribal priest to build a new village nearby on higher ground, so that they could send salvage parties to the old village site. The new village site has never been found. The demolishing of older structures to salvage materials for the construction of new ones may have eradicated the site of the new village if it existed.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d "9,000 Year Old Chinese Flutes - Nature Article".
  2. ^ Li, X; Harbottle, Garman; Zhang Juzhong; Wang Changsui (2003). "The earliest writing? Sign use in the seventh millennium BC at Jiahu, Henan Province, China". Antiquity. 77 (295): 31–44. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00061329. S2CID 162602307.
  3. ^ Liu 2012, p. 87.
  4. ^ Nakajima, Tsuneo; Hudson, Mark J.; Uchiyama, Junzo; Makibayashi, Keisuke; Zhang, Juzhong (2019). "Common carp aquaculture in Neolithic China dates back 8,000 years". Nature Ecology & Evolution. 3 (10): 1415–1418. doi:10.1038/s41559-019-0974-3. PMID 31527727. S2CID 202579732.
  5. ^ Juzhong, Z. and Kuem, L.K. Natural History magazine, September 2005.
  6. ^ a b c Yuan-Yuan, L. and Shen, S. Chinese Musical Instruments (Chinese Music Monograph Series). 1999. Chinese Music Society of North America Press. ISBN 1-880464-03-9
  7. ^ a b c d Juzhong, Z., Xiao, X., and Lee, Y.K., 2004, "The early development of music. Analysis of the Jiahu bone flutes." Antiquity 78(302): 769-779.
  8. ^ McGovern, Patrick E., et al., 2004 "Fermented beverages of pre- and proto-historic China." PNAS 101(51):17593-17598

References edit

  • Liu, Li; et al. (2012). The Archaeology of China : From the Late Paleolithic to the Early Bronze Age. Cambridge University Press.
  • Lee, Yuan-Yuan; Shen, Sin-yan (1999). Chinese musical instruments. Chinese Music Society of North America. ISBN 978-1-880464-03-8.
  • Liu, Li (2005). The Chinese Neolithic: Trajectories to Early States. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-81184-2.
  • Zhang, Juzhong; Xiao, Xinghua; Lee, Yun Kuen (2004). "The early development of music. Analysis of the Jiahu bone flutes" (PDF). Antiquity. 78 (302): 769–778. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00113432.
  • Li, Xueqin; Harbottle, Garman; Zhang, Juzhong; Wang, Changsui (2003). "The earliest writing? Sign use in the seventh millennium BC at Jiahu, Henan Province, China". Antiquity. 77 (295): 31–45. doi:10.1017/S0003598X00061329. S2CID 162602307.

External links edit

  • Introduction to Jiahu site at The Metropolitan Museum of Art
  • 9,000 Year Old Chinese Flutes
  • Bone flute found in China at 9,000-year-old Neolithic site
  • Ancient brew discovered in China
  • BBC on tortoise shells discovered in China
  • Neolithic rice cultivation 2005-02-26 at the Wayback Machine
  • New Archaeological Discoveries and Researches in 2004 - New achievements in botanic archaeology in China

jiahu, chateau, dogfish, head, brewery, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, sch. For the ale Chateau Jiahu see Dogfish Head Brewery This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Jiahu news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Jiahu Chinese 賈湖 pinyin Jiǎhu was the site of a Neolithic settlement based in the central plain of ancient China near the Yellow River It is located between the floodplains of the Ni River to the north and the Sha River to the south 22 km 14 mi north of the modern city of Wuyang Henan Province 1 Most archaeologists consider the site to be one of the earliest examples of the Peiligang culture Settled around 7000 BC the site was later flooded and abandoned around 5700 BC The settlement was surrounded by a moat and covered a relatively large area of 55 000 square meters 5 5 hectare At one time it was a complex highly organized Chinese Neolithic society 1 home to at least 250 people and perhaps as many as 800 Jiahu賈湖Location in north ChinaLocationChinaRegionHenanCoordinates33 36 47 N 113 40 01 E 33 613 N 113 667 E 33 613 113 667HistoryFoundedc 7000 BCAbandonedc 5700 BCCulturesPeiligang cultureThe important discoveries of the Jiahu archaeological site include the Jiahu symbols possibly an early example of proto writing 2 carved into tortoise shells and bones the thirty three Jiahu flutes carved from the wing bones of cranes believed to be among the oldest playable musical instruments in the world and evidence of alcohol fermented from rice honey and hawthorn leaves A broad variety of other artifacts indicates a fairly advanced settlement for the early Neolithic period including residences burial sites pottery kilns an assortment of implements made of stone and earthenware and a large central structure believed to be a communal workspace To date 45 residences have been excavated at Jiahu Most of these are small between four and ten meters Most of these were semi subterranean partially dug into the earth and with a single room however some of these had additional rooms built on later Rubbish pits and storage cellars were also excavated and nine pottery kilns were identified Contents 1 Discovery and excavation of the site 2 Jiahu and Peiligang 3 Agriculture hunting fishing and foraging 4 Tools fortifications and weapons 5 Evidence of cultural development 5 1 Ceremonial burial 5 2 Flutes 5 3 Pottery and fermented beverages 5 4 Inscribed symbols 6 End of the village a flood 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksDiscovery and excavation of the site editDiscovered by Zhu Zhi in 1962 extensive excavation of the site did not occur until the 1980s Most of the site still has not been excavated although work is slowly progressing The excavation of Jiahu burial sites and rubbish pits has been productive yielding abundant evidence about the lives of the Jiahu people Chinese researchers from the Henan Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology led for many years by Zhang Juzhong a professor from the University of Science and Technology of China have carried out archaeological research around the site for decades Zhang s team conducted excavation of portions of the site in seven stages each stage took two to three years A large portion of the Jiahu site was excavated in the first two phases of the project between 1983 and 1987 Zhang and his assistants published the findings of the first two phases in detail in the journal Antiquity Jiahu and Peiligang editSome archaeologists point to cultural distinctions between Jiahu and Peiligang as well as the distance Jiahu is isolated many kilometers south of the larger Peiligang grouping of over 100 archaeological sites in a fairly compact area The distance would have represented a journey on foot of several days in the Neolithic era This school of thought suggests that Jiahu and Peiligang represented separate neighboring cultures that interacted and shared many characteristics Other early Neolithic settlements in this part of the world were much farther south and east Archaeologists have divided Jiahu into three distinct phases The oldest phase ranges from 7000 to 6600 BC the middle phase ranges from 6600 to 6200 BC and the last phase ranges from 6200 to 5700 BC 1 The last two phases correspond to the Peiligang culture while the earliest phase is unique to Jiahu Careful examination of the skeletons of over 400 individuals removed from more than 300 graves by several scientific teams over the course of the past 30 years illustrates that the Jiahu ethnic group was a part of the Northern Mongoloid group and identified closely with the Miaodigou and Xiawanggang sub groups which were also descendants of hunting and gathering tribes in Henan Province and the Dawenkou Xixiahou and Yedian sub groups that were later found in Shandong Province 1 Agriculture hunting fishing and foraging edit nbsp Red crowned cranes in Hokkaido Japan Currently an endangered species they were plentiful throughout the East Asia region in the Neolithic period and were hunted for meat their wing bones were used to make the Jiahu flutes The inhabitants of Jiahu cultivated foxtail millet and rice While millet cultivation is common in the Peiligang culture rice cultivation at Jiahu is unique and tends to support the theory that Jiahu was a separate culture from the Peiligang grouping On the other hand difference in local climate moisture and soil conditions may have made cultivating rice in the Peiligang area more difficult Jiahu rice cultivation is one of the earliest found and the most northerly found at such an early stage in history The rice was a kind of short grained japonica rice Scholars had previously thought the earliest domesticated rice belonged to the long grain indica subspecies There is abundant proof of millet farming in cool dry high latitudes of the Yellow River Valley and rice farming dominated in warm moist low latitudes of the Yangtze River Valley The early Neolithic site of Jiahu lies near the boundary between the cool dry north and the warm moist south In another sign of advancement Jiahu s farmers had moved on from the usual slash and burn techniques of Neolithic farmers and were using intensive cultivation in permanent fields Jiahu is also the site of the earliest find of wild soybean seeds in China a large quantity of soybean remains were discovered at Jiahu 3 Food was plentiful from farming as well as hunting and foraging and contributed to considerable population growth for such an early settlement Women of the Jiahu culture gathered wild pears and apricots and foraged for acorns chestnuts broad beans edible roots and tubers in the surrounding countryside There is evidence of domesticated pigs dogs poultry and small numbers of cattle The Jiahu people used manure from their pigs and cattle as fertilizer substantially increasing the yield of their rice crops The livestock produced meat milk and eggs There was also evidence of deer wild boar and rabbit hunting and fishing in the nearby rivers to the north and south with nets made of hemp fibers The earliest evidence of Common carp aquaculture was also found at Jiahu 4 The red crowned crane a large bird indigenous to the region was hunted for meat its bones and feathers were also used for other purposes Due to this steadily improving and varied diet the health and longevity of the Jiahu people gradually improved This has been documented through comparison of the archaeological evidence Over 400 burials have been unearthed at Jiahu and many hundreds more are believed to await excavation Skeletons have been measured and carefully examined revealing the height weight gender and approximate age of each of the deceased Jiahu at the time of death as well as the general health and in many cases the cause of death The three phases of Jiahu history correspond to steadily increasing numbers of middle aged and older people suggesting an increase in survival and life expectancy and fewer remains of children and infants suggesting a reduction in child and infant mortality By the third phase the average height of an adult had increased by two centimetres 3 4 in and the bones and teeth were in significantly better condition Tools fortifications and weapons editA stone sickle blade has been recovered This was secured to a wooden handle to harvest grain Evidence of baskets woven from wild grass has been uncovered These were used to carry grain from the harvests Remnants of a spinning loom have been found indicating the production of cloth probably from hemp fibers Among the many tools and utensils unearthed at Jiahu are three legged earthenware cooking pots with tight fitting lids and a variety of stone implements including arrowheads barbed harpoons spades axes awls and chisels Stone spearheads have also been found and evidence of what may have been a wooden stockade fence along at least a portion of the interior shore of the moat These improved weapons and the moat surrounding the settlement provided an ideal defense for such an early culture The area is known to have been frequented by nomadic hunting and gathering tribes for several thousand years prior to the Jiahu settlement and these may have been potential enemies as well as the genetic forebears of Jiahu The Jiahu people are not believed to have been warlike in nature but capable of defending themselves if the need arose Thorough examination of the site has revealed no evidence of any armed conflict Unearthed human remains showing signs of violent death are very rare and scattered along the known timeline rather than occurring at the same time which would indicate a battle It is possible that the large size of the settlement its substantial defenses and the improved weapons of the Jiahu people may have caused potential enemies of that time to keep their distance Such a scenario is consistent with the substantial growth in population and longevity exhibited by the Jiahu site Without war and with plenty of nutritious food the village flourished Evidence of cultural development editAfter thorough study of 238 skeletal remains Harvard University forensic archaeologist Barbara Li Smith published findings that the Jiahu villagers enjoyed fairly good health The average age of death by the third phase was around 40 representing a very good life expectancy for Neolithic people Sponge lesions on the skulls indicate that anemia and iron deficiency were a problem Hole bone lesions from disease and parasitic infections were rare although fecal evidence indicated the occasional presence of hookworm parasites possibly from poorly cooked pork Ceremonial burial edit The burials at Jiahu were usually accompanied by burial offerings with increasing frequency as the second and third phases progressed Burial objects range from pottery to tortoise shells Burial offerings varied between individuals and are believed to be linked to the skills they displayed in life providing evidence of an early specialization of labor The types of labor specialization from most common to most rare included farmers herdsmen fishermen hunters potters musicians and a tribal priest Most of the burials were earthen pits infants were buried in earthenware jars As is common with Neolithic communities the burials were in cemeteries which were separate from the residential areas although many gravesites overlapped so they were probably not marked A few burials were multiple while most burial pits contained single individuals These did not follow any discernible pattern although it is possible that in some cases couples a man and a woman of roughly the same age were buried together In some graves the heads were severed from the body and pointed toward the northwest Cut marks made when the bones were fresh indicates the heads were cut off shortly after the person died A few burial offerings included turquoise carvings and represented a significant level of material wealth suggesting some differences in social status Burial offerings in women s graves were more sparse indicating lower social status and indicated that their roles were limited to childbearing and child care cooking and foraging for food Flutes edit nbsp Gudi flute found at Jiahu on display at the Henan MuseumSome of the most significant burial offerings discovered were playable tonal flutes made from red crowned crane wing bones This crane is 1 5 metres 5 ft tall with a wingspan of 2 4 m 8 ft yielding large bones for this purpose The first of the flutes were found in the late 1980s but were not described in the West until 1999 5 6 Thirty three flutes including around 20 intact flutes several broken or fragmented ones and several more unfinished ones have been found at Jiahu All are between 18 and 25 cm 7 and 10 in in length 6 It seems plausible that ancient flutes were also made from bamboo Ancient myths described bamboo flutes but no ancient ones have been found in all likelihood because bamboo decays more quickly than bone and doesn t survive burial for thousands of years like bone The oldest phase at Jiahu only contains two flutes which are tetratonic and pentatonic the middle phase at Jiahu contains several flutes including an interesting pair of hexatonic flutes 7 One of the flutes was broken and the other flute seems to be a replica of the first flute as it shows evidence of adjustments made to match the pitch of the first Innovations in the last phase include the use of heptatonic flutes 7 The flutes were cut smoothed at the ends polished and finally drilled with a row of holes on one side One of the broken flutes was repaired by drilling fourteen tiny holes along the breakage lines and then tying the sections together with hemp string 7 The flutes play in the so called pentatonic scale in which octaves are divided into five notes the basis of many kinds of music including Chinese folk music 6 7 The fact that the flute has a scale indicates that its original players played music rather than just single notes The flutes were probably used in some kind of ceremonial capacity but may have been played for entertainment Pottery and fermented beverages edit Jiahu yielded some of the oldest Chinese pottery yet found in Neolithic China Patrick McGovern of the University of Pennsylvania Museum led a team of scientists who applied biomarker chemical analysis to pottery jars from Jiahu They found signature molecules proving alcohol was fermented from rice honey grapes and hawthorn Researchers hypothesize that this hybrid beverage a beer wine and mead combination was fermented by the process of mold saccharification a uniquely Chinese contribution to the art of beverage making in which several mold species are used to break down the carbohydrates of rice and other grains into simple fermentable sugars Specific aromatic herbs and flowers such as chrysanthemum in addition to tree resins such as China fir had been added to the hybrid beverages the researchers found These aromatic additions as well as the honey indicate that fermented beverages with a pleasing aroma and sweet taste were important to the Jiahu people 8 Substantial quantities of rice and millet were stored in pottery jars enabling the specialization of labor Jiahu society is believed to have been fairly egalitarian with several hundred residents of the village at the height of its development Comparative DNA evidence from remains in the Jiahu settlement itself as well as other evidence gathered leads to speculation among researchers that there were one or more other ancient villages nearby with peaceful interaction with the Jiahu in some form but the sites of other villages nearby have not been located Inscribed symbols edit Main article Jiahu symbols nbsp Examples of Jiahu symbolsAt Jiahu archaeologists identified eleven markings of Jiahu symbols also known as pictograms nine on tortoise shells and two on bone as possible evidence for proto writing The markings correspond to the middle phase Some of the markings are quite similar to later Chinese characters two of the most intriguing marks appear to be similar to later characters for eye 目 and sun 日 However correspondence of many early non writing symbols with the Shang dynasty period oracle bone writing is to be expected given the pictographic style of many of the Shang characters In later Chinese culture dating to around 3500 BC tortoise shells were used as a form of divination These were subjected to intense heat and the cracks that formed were read as omens The cracks were then carved as permanent marks on the surface of the shell The evidence of shell pictograms from Jiahu may indicate that this tradition or a related one has much deeper roots in ancient Chinese culture than previously considered End of the village a flood editBased on the archaeological evidence a severe flood from the nearby rivers submerged most or all of the Jiahu settlement under a few feet of water sometime around 5700 BC The inhabitants evacuated It is not known where they went The absence of tools and weapons in most of the residences indicates that they were able to salvage most of their belongings They may have built a new village that has not been discovered emigrated to the Peiligang villages or scattered Zhang Juzhong imagines that they were led by their tribal priest to build a new village nearby on higher ground so that they could send salvage parties to the old village site The new village site has never been found The demolishing of older structures to salvage materials for the construction of new ones may have eradicated the site of the new village if it existed Notes edit a b c d 9 000 Year Old Chinese Flutes Nature Article Li X Harbottle Garman Zhang Juzhong Wang Changsui 2003 The earliest writing Sign use in the seventh millennium BC at Jiahu Henan Province China Antiquity 77 295 31 44 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00061329 S2CID 162602307 Liu 2012 p 87 Nakajima Tsuneo Hudson Mark J Uchiyama Junzo Makibayashi Keisuke Zhang Juzhong 2019 Common carp aquaculture in Neolithic China dates back 8 000 years Nature Ecology amp Evolution 3 10 1415 1418 doi 10 1038 s41559 019 0974 3 PMID 31527727 S2CID 202579732 Juzhong Z and Kuem L K Natural History magazine September 2005 a b c Yuan Yuan L and Shen S Chinese Musical Instruments Chinese Music Monograph Series 1999 Chinese Music Society of North America Press ISBN 1 880464 03 9 a b c d Juzhong Z Xiao X and Lee Y K 2004 The early development of music Analysis of the Jiahu bone flutes Antiquity 78 302 769 779 McGovern Patrick E et al 2004 Fermented beverages of pre and proto historic China PNAS 101 51 17593 17598References editLiu Li et al 2012 The Archaeology of China From the Late Paleolithic to the Early Bronze Age Cambridge University Press Lee Yuan Yuan Shen Sin yan 1999 Chinese musical instruments Chinese Music Society of North America ISBN 978 1 880464 03 8 Liu Li 2005 The Chinese Neolithic Trajectories to Early States Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 81184 2 Zhang Juzhong Xiao Xinghua Lee Yun Kuen 2004 The early development of music Analysis of the Jiahu bone flutes PDF Antiquity 78 302 769 778 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00113432 Li Xueqin Harbottle Garman Zhang Juzhong Wang Changsui 2003 The earliest writing Sign use in the seventh millennium BC at Jiahu Henan Province China Antiquity 77 295 31 45 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00061329 S2CID 162602307 External links editIntroduction to Jiahu site at The Metropolitan Museum of Art 9 000 Year Old Chinese Flutes Bone flute found in China at 9 000 year old Neolithic site Ancient brew discovered in China BBC on tortoise shells discovered in China 9 000 Year History of Chinese Fermented Beverages Confirmed by Penn Museum Archaeochemist and an International Team of Scholars Neolithic rice cultivation Archived 2005 02 26 at the Wayback Machine New Archaeological Discoveries and Researches in 2004 New achievements in botanic archaeology in China Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jiahu amp oldid 1170074594, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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