Weiss Ehud, Wetterstrom Wilma, Nadel Dani, Bar-Yosef Ofer
Department of Anthropology, Peabody Museum, Harvard University, 11 Divinity Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2004 Jun 29;101(26):9551-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0402362101. Epub 2004 Jun 21.
The beginning of agriculture is one of the most important developments in human history, with enormous consequences that paved the way for settled life and complex society. Much of the research on the origins of agriculture over the last 40 years has been guided by Flannery's [Flannery, K. V. (1969) in The Domestication and Exploitation of Plants and Animals, eds. Ucko, P. J. & Dimbleby, G. W. (Duckworth, London), pp. 73-100] "broad spectrum revolution" (BSR) hypothesis, which posits that the transition to farming in southwest Asia entailed a period during which foragers broadened their resource base to encompass a wide array of foods that were previously ignored in an attempt to overcome food shortages. Although these resources undoubtedly included plants, nearly all BSR hypothesis-inspired research has focused on animals because of a dearth of Upper Paleolithic archaeobotanical assemblages. Now, however, a collection of >90,000 plant remains, recently recovered from the Stone Age site Ohalo II (23,000 B.P.), Israel, offers insights into the plant foods of the late Upper Paleolithic. The staple foods of this assemblage were wild grasses, pushing back the dietary shift to grains some 10,000 years earlier than previously recognized. Besides the cereals (wild wheat and barley), small-grained grasses made up a large component of the assemblage, indicating that the BSR in the Levant was even broader than originally conceived, encompassing what would have been low-ranked plant foods. Over the next 15,000 years small-grained grasses were gradually replaced by the cereals and ultimately disappeared from the Levantine diet.
农业的起源是人类历史上最重要的发展之一,其产生的巨大影响为定居生活和复杂社会铺平了道路。在过去40年里,许多关于农业起源的研究都受到了弗拉纳里(Flannery, K. V. (1969) in The Domestication and Exploitation of Plants and Animals, eds. Ucko, P. J. & Dimbleby, G. W. (Duckworth, London), pp. 73 - 100)“广谱革命”(BSR)假说的指导。该假说认为,西南亚向农业的转变经历了一个时期,在此期间,觅食者拓宽了他们的资源基础,将一系列以前被忽视的食物纳入其中,以试图克服食物短缺问题。尽管这些资源无疑包括植物,但由于旧石器时代晚期考古植物组合的匮乏,几乎所有受BSR假说启发的研究都集中在动物上。然而现在,从以色列旧石器时代遗址奥哈洛二号(公元前23000年)最近发掘出的90000多件植物遗骸,为我们了解旧石器时代晚期的植物性食物提供了线索。这个组合中的主要食物是野草,将饮食向谷物的转变时间比之前认为的提前了约10000年。除了谷物(野生小麦和大麦),小粒草在这个组合中占了很大一部分,这表明黎凡特地区的广谱革命比最初设想的更为广泛,还包括了原本被认为是低等级的植物性食物。在接下来的15000年里,小粒草逐渐被谷物取代,并最终从黎凡特人的饮食中消失。