Pottery Impressions Reveal Earlier Westward Dispersal of Foxtail Millet in Inner Asian Mountain Corridor


Endo E. Shoda S. Frachetti M. Kaliyeva Z. Kiyasbek G. Zhuniskhanov A. Liu X. Dupuy P.D.
July 2023Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)

Agronomy
2023#13Issue 7

The Inner Asian Mountain Corridor (IAMC) has been identified as a major pathway for the westward dispersal of millet from Northern China, where it was initially cultivated. Cross-disciplinary investigations are necessary to distinguish cultivated millet taxa from their wild relatives and to clarify the social context underlying millet adoption in novel environments. Despite the ambiguity in distinguishing Setaria italica from Panicum miliaceum or other Setaria species using conventional analysis of charred macro remains, recent attention has focused on the time gap between the introduction of S. italica to IAMC following P. miliaceum. Here, we employed a pottery impression casting method on materials from four Bronze Age sites in eastern/southeastern Kazakhstan to investigate the surface textures of grain impressions on the surface of pottery containers. We successfully identified both millets (Setaeria and Panicum) from three of the sites, Begash, Tasbas, and Dali in the IAMC. Based on our findings, two species of millet were introduced to the region within a much shorter range of time than previously estimated. In addition, the current evidence supports the premise that these cereals were likely utilized for human consumption.

Bronze Age , Central Asia , Kazakhstan , Panicum miliaceum , pottery impression casting method , Setaria italica

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Center for Obsidian and Lithic Studies, Meiji University, Tokyo, 101-8301, Japan
Nara National Research Institute for Cultural Properties, Nara, 630-8577, Japan
BioArCh, University of York, York, YO10 5DD, United Kingdom
Department of Anthropology, Washington University in St. Louis, Saint Louis, 63110, MO, United States
Margulan Institute of Archaeology, Almaty, 050010, Kazakhstan
School of Sciences and Humanities, Nazarbayev University, Astana, 010000, Kazakhstan

Center for Obsidian and Lithic Studies
Nara National Research Institute for Cultural Properties
BioArCh
Department of Anthropology
Margulan Institute of Archaeology
School of Sciences and Humanities

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