Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8914814 | Quaternary Science Reviews | 2018 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
The Yaojiang Valley (YJV) of southern Hangzhou Bay was the birthplace of the well-known Hemudu Culture (HC), one of the representatives of Neolithic civilization in eastern China. To explore the magnitude of natural environmental effects on the HC trajectory, the palaeo-embayment setting of the YJV was studied in detail for the first time in terms of 3D Holocene strata supported by a series of new radiocarbon-dated cores. The results indicated that the local relative sea level rose rapidly during the Early Holocene in the YJV, reached its maximum flooding surface ca. 7900â¯calâ¯yr BP, and then remained stable ca. 7900-7600â¯calâ¯yr BP. Thereupon, an estuary stretching inland was first formed by marine transgression, and then, it was transformed to an alluvial-coastal plain by regressive progradation. The alluvial plain was initiated in the foothills and then spread towards the valley centre after sea level stabilization ca. 7600â¯calâ¯yr BP. Accompanying these natural environmental changes, the earliest arrivals of foragers in the valley occurred no later than ca. 7000â¯calâ¯yr BP. They engaged in rice farming and fostered the HC for approximately two millennia from ca. 7000-5000â¯calâ¯yr BP as more lands developed from coastal progradation. The rise and development of the HC are closely associated with the sea level-induced landscape changes in the YJV in the Early-Middle Holocene, but the enigmatic exodus of the HC people after ca. 5000â¯calâ¯yr BP is still contentious and possibly linked with the rapid waterlogging and deterioration of this setting in such a low-lying coastal plain as well as with associated social reasons.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Yan Liu, Qianli Sun, Daidu Fan, Bin Dai, Fuwei Ma, Lichen Xu, Jing Chen, Zhongyuan Chen,