Documenting the Evolution of Agrobiodiversity in the Archaeological Record: Landraces of a Newly Described Domesticate (Polygonum erectum) in North America
MAIZE ZEA-MAYS
; GENETIC DIVERSITY
; SEED SELECTION
; FARMERS
; ANCIENT
; GOURDS
; OHIO
; DNA
; BP
; CULTIVATION
WOS学科分类:
Anthropology
; Archaeology
WOS研究方向:
Anthropology
; Archaeology
英文摘要:
Relatively few farmers today actively maintain crop biodiversity, but for most of the history of agriculture this was the norm. Archaeobotanical analyses can reveal the processes that led to the evolution of crop biodiversity throughout the Holocene, an issue of critical importance in an era of climate change and agrobiodiversity loss. Indigenous eastern North Americans domesticated several annual seed crops, called the Eastern Agricultural Complex, beginning c.1800BC. Using population morphometrics, this paper reports new evidence for the evolution of a domesticated sub-species of one of these crops, erect knotweed (Polyongum erectum L.), and its subsequent diversification under cultivation. Morphometric analyses were conducted on archaeological erect knotweed populations spanning its ancient cultivated range, and these were directly dated to c.1-1350AD, anchoring the evolution of this crop in both time and space. Domesticated erect knotweed first appears c.1AD in the Middle Ohio Valley. A diachronic series of populations from western Illinois shows that this species was domesticated again c.150-1000AD. This study shows how agricultural knowledge and material were maintained and shared (or not) by communities during an important era in eastern North America's history: when small communities were aggregating to form the earliest urban center at Cahokia, in the American Bottom floodplain. A distinctive landrace was developed by farmers in the American Bottom which is significantly different from cultivated populations in other regions. Subsequent Mississippian assemblages (c.1000-1350AD) indicate divergent agricultural communities of practice, and possibly the eventual feralization of erect knotweed. Archaeobotanical studies have a vast untapped potential to reveal interaction between communities, or their isolation, and to investigate the evolution of crops after initial domestication.
Cornell Univ, Integrated Sch Plant Sci, 135 Plant Sci Bldg, Ithaca, NY 14850 USA
Recommended Citation:
Mueller, Natalie G.. Documenting the Evolution of Agrobiodiversity in the Archaeological Record: Landraces of a Newly Described Domesticate (Polygonum erectum) in North America[J]. JOURNAL OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL METHOD AND THEORY,2019-01-01,26(1):313-343