Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T13:16:10.177Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The topographic and environmental context of the earliest village sites in western South Asia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

C.A. Petrie
Affiliation:
Division of Archaeology, Department of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge, CB2 3DZ, UK
K.D. Thomas
Affiliation:
Institute of Archaeology, University College London, 31–34 Gordon Square, London, WC1H 0PY, UK

Extract

Researchers in several continents have found that agriculture began not in major river valleys but up in the hills, where early farmers tended crops on alluvial fans and improved irrigation by building earth barriers across them. Here the authors reveal a similar process in the hills of Baluchistan and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, where early farming villages overlook the plains of the Punjab and Sindh, heartland of the later Indus civilisation. Today this is a troubled border zone, with difficult access on the ground, but our researchers make exemplary use of satellite survey to map the villages in their specific local environments.

Type
Research article
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2012

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ali, I. & Khan, G.R.. 2001. Jhandi Babar I: a Neolithic site in the Gomal plain, Pakistan. Ancient Pakistan 14: 174217.Google Scholar
Cunningham, A. 1875. Harappa. Archaeological Survey of India Reports 1872-73: 105108.Google Scholar
Dales, G.F. 1966. Recent trends in the pre-and proto-historic archaeology in South Asia. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 110.2: 130-39.Google Scholar
Durrani, F.A. 1988. Excavations in the Gomal Valley. Rehman Dheri Excavations Reports 1. Ancient Pakistan 6: 1232.Google Scholar
Fairservis, W. 1956. Excavations in the Quetta Valley, West Pakistan (Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 45.2). New York: American Museum of Natural History.Google Scholar
Fairservis, W. 1959. Archaeological surveys in the Zhob and Loralai districts, West Pakistan (Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 47.2). New York: American Museum of Natural History.Google Scholar
Fairservis, W. 1961. The Harappan civilization: new evidence and more theory. American Museum Novitates 2055: 135.Google Scholar
Fairservis, W. 1967. The origin, character, and decline of an early civilization. American Museum Novitates 2302: 147.Google Scholar
Fuller, D.Q. 2006. Agricultural origins and frontiers in South Asia: a working synthesis. Journal of World Prehistory 20: 186.Google Scholar
Government of India. 1884. Gazetteer of Dera Ismail Khan district, 1883-1884. Lahore: Punjab Government.Google Scholar
Hemphill, W.R. & Kidwai, A.H.. 1973. Stratigraphy of the Bannu and Dera Ismail Khan areas, Pakistan. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office.Google Scholar
Jarrige, J.-F. 1995. Introduction, in Jarrige, C., Jarrige, J.-F., Meadow, R.H. & Quivron, G. (ed.) Mehrgarh: field reports 1974-1985, from Neolithic times to the Indus civilization: 51103. Karachi: Department of Culture & Tourism of Sindh, Department of Archaeology and Museums, French Ministry of Foreign Affairs.Google Scholar
Jarrige, J.-F. 2000. Mehrgarh Neolithic: new excavations, in Taddei, M. & Marco, G. De (ed.) South Asian archaeology 1997. Proceedings of the 14th international conference of the European Association of South Asian Archaeologists, held in the Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente, Palazzo Brancaccio, Rome, 7-14 July, 1997 (Serie Orientale Roma 90): 259-83. Rome: Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente.Google Scholar
Jarrige, J.-F. 2008. Mehrgarh Neolithic. Prāgdhārā 18: 135-54.Google Scholar
Jarrige, J.-F. & Jarrige, C.. 2006. Premiers pasteurs et agriculteurs dans le sous-continent Indo-Pakistanais. Palevol 5: 463-72.Google Scholar
Jarrige, J.-F. & Santoni, M.. 1979. Fouilles du Pakistan 2. Paris: Commission des Fouilles Arche ologiques.Google Scholar
Jarrige, J.-F., Jarrige, C. & Quivron, G.. 2005. Mehrgarh Neolithic: the updated sequence, in Jarrige, C. & Lefévre, V. (ed.) South Asian archaeology 2001. Proceedings of the 16th international conference of the European Association of South Asian Archaeologists held in College de France, Paris, 2-6 July , 2001: 129-41. Paris: Editions Recherche sur les Civilisations.Google Scholar
Kenoyer, J.M. 1991. Urban process in the Indus Tradition: a preliminary model from Harappa, in Meadow, R.H. (ed.) Harappa excavations 1986-1990: a multidisciplinary approach to third millennium urbanism: 2960. Madison (WI): Prehistory Press.Google Scholar
Kenoyer, J.M. & Meadow, R.. 2000. The Ravi Phase: a new cultural manifestation at Harappa, in Taddei, M. & Marco, G. de (ed.) South Asian archaeology 1997. Proceedings of the 14th international conference of the European Association of South Asian Archaeologists, held in the Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente, Palazzo Brancaccio, Rome, 7-14 July, 1997 (Serie Orientale Roma 90): 5576. Rome: Istituto Italiano per l'Africa e l'Oriente.Google Scholar
Khan, F., Knox, J.R. & Thomas, K.D.. 1991. Explorations and excavations in Bannu district, North-West Frontier province, Pakistan, 1985-1988. London: British Museum, Department of Oriental Antiquities.Google Scholar
Khan, F., Knox, J.R. & Thomas, K.D.. 2004. West of the Indus: the chronology of settlement in the protohistoric culture phases, with special reference to the Bannu region. Ancient Pakistan 15 (for 2002): 119-25.Google Scholar
Khan, F., Knox, J.R., Thomas, K.D., Petrie, C.A. & Morris, J.C.. 2010a. Other early village sites in the Bannu basin, in Petrie, C.A. (ed.) Sheri Khan Tarakai and early village life in the borderlands of north-west Pakistan (Bannu Archaeological Project monographs 1): 353-78. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Khan, F., Knox, J.R., Thomas, K.D., C.A. Petrie & Morris, J.C., edited by Petrie, C.A.. 2010b. Sheri Khan Tarakai and early village life in the borderlands of north-west Pakistan (Bannu Archaeological Project monographs 1). Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Kuijt, I., Finlayson, B. & MacKay, J.. 2007. Pottery Neolithic landscape modification at Dhra'. Antiquity 81: 106-18.Google Scholar
Liu, X., Hunt, H. & Jones, M.K.. 2009. River valleys and foothills: changing archaeological perceptions of North China's earliest farms. Antiquity 83: 8295.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meadow, R.H. 1996. The origin and spread of agriculture and pastoralism in South Asia, in, Harris, D.R. (ed.) The origin and spread of agriculture and pastoralism in Eurasia: 390412. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press.Google Scholar
Meadow, R.H. & Kenoyer, J.M.. 2005. Excavations at Harappa 2000-2001: new insights on chronology and city organization, in Jarrige, C. & Lefevre, V. (ed.) South Asian archaeology 2001. Proceedings of the 16th international conference of the European Association of South Asian Archaeologists held in College de France, Paris, 2-6 July , 2001: 207-25. Paris: Editions Recherche sur les Civilisations.Google Scholar
Meadow, R.H. & Kenoyer, J.M.. 2008. Harappa excavations 1998-1999: new evidence for the development and manifestation of the Harappan Phenomenon, in Raven, E. (ed.) South Asian archaeology 1999. Proceedings of the 15th international conference of the European Association of South Asian Archaeologists, held at the Universiteit Leiden, 5-9 July, 1999 (Gonda Indological studies 15): 85109. Groningen: Forstan.Google Scholar
Mughal, M.R. 1972. A summary of excavations and explorations in Pakistan (1971 and 1972): excavations at Jalilpur. Pakistan Archaeology 8: 117-24.Google Scholar
Mughal, M.R. 1991. Ancient sites in Cholistan, Bahawalpur (1974-77 survey). Lahore Museum Bulletin 4.2: 156.Google Scholar
Mughal, M.R. 1997. Ancient Cholistan: archaeology and architecture. Rawalpindi: Ferozsons.Google Scholar
Petrie, C.A. 2007. Remote sensing in inaccessible lands: plains and preservation along old routes between Pakistan and Afghanistan. ArchAtlas February 2010, Edition 4. Available at: http://www.archatlas.org/workshop/Petrie07.php (accessed 20 March 2012).Google Scholar
Petrie, C.A., Khan, F., Knox, J.R., Thomas, K.D. & Morris, J.C.. 2010. The investigation of early villages in the hills and on the plains of western South Asia, in Petrie, C.A. (ed.) Sheri Khan Tarakai and early village life in the borderlands of north-west Pakistan (Bannu Archaeological Project monographs 1): 728. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Piggott, S. 1947. A new prehistoric ceramic ware from Baluchistan. Ancient India 3: 131-42.Google Scholar
Possehl, G.L. 1999. Indus Age: the beginnings. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Prickett, M. 1986. Settlement during the early periods, in Beale, T.W. (ed.) Excavations at Tepe Yahya, Iran 1967-1976: the early periods (American School of Prehistoric Research Bulletin 38): 215-46. Cambridge: Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.Google Scholar
Raikes, R.L. 1967. Water, weather and prehistory. London: John Baker.Google Scholar
Raikes, R.L. & Dyson, R.H.. 1961. The prehistoric climate of Baluchistan and the Indus Valley. American Anthropologist 63: 265-81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sherratt, A. 1980. Water, soil and seasonality in early cereal cultivation. World Archaeology 11.3: 313-30.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A. 1997. Climatic cycles and behavioural revolutions: the emergence of modern humans and the beginnings of farming. Antiquity 71: 271-87.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A. 2007. Diverse origins: the regional contributions to the genesis of farming, in Colledge, S. & Conolly, J. (ed.) The origins and spread of domestic plants in southwest Asia and Europe: 120. Walnut Creek (CA): Left Coast Press.Google Scholar
Stein, M.A. 1929. An archaeological tour in Waziristan and northern Baluchistan (Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of India 37). Calcutta: Government of India Central Publication Office.Google Scholar
Thomas, D.C., Kidd, F.J., Nikolovski, S. & Zipfel, C.. 2008. The archaeological sites in Afghanistan in Google Earth. Aerial Archaeology Research Group News 37: 2230.Google Scholar
Thomas, K.D. 2003. Minimising risk? Approaches to pre-Harappan human ecology on the north-west margin of the Greater Indus system, in Weber, S. & Belcher, R. (ed.) Indus ethnobiology: new perspectives from the field: 397430. Lanham (MD) & Oxford: Lexington.Google Scholar
Thomas, K.D., Petrie, C.A., Khan, F., Knox, J.R. & Morris, J.C.. 2010a. Early village sites in the Gomal plain, in Petrie, C.A. (ed.) Sheri Khan Tarakai and early village life in the borderlands of north-west Pakistan (Bannu Archaeological Project monographs 1): 379-98. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Thomas, K.D., Khan, F. & Petrie, C.A.. 2010b. The physical and human geography of the Bannu basin, in Petrie, C.A. (ed.) Sheri Khan Tarakai and early village life in the borderlands of north-west Pakistan (Bannu Archaeological Project monographs 1): 2939. Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Vita-Finzi, C. 1969a. Fluvial geology, in Brothwell, D. & Higgs, E.S. (ed.) Science in archaeology: 135-50. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Vita-Finzi, C. 1969b. Geological opportunism, in Ucko, P. & Dimbleby, G. (ed.) The domestication and exploitation of plants and animals: 3134. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar