Fuller Dorian Q, Barron Aleese, Champion Louis, Dupuy Christian, Commelin Dominique, Raimbault Michel, Denham Tim
Institute of Archaeology, University College London, 31-34 Gordon Square, London, WC1H 0PY UK.
School of Cultural Heritage, Northwest University, Xi'an, China.
Afr Archaeol Rev. 2021;38(2):211-230. doi: 10.1007/s10437-021-09428-8. Epub 2021 Mar 16.
Imprints of domesticated pearl millet ( (L.) R. Br.) spikelets, observed as temper in ceramics dating to the third millennium BC, provide the earliest evidence for the cultivation and domestication process of this crop in northern Mali. Additional sherds from the same region dating to the fifth and fourth millennium BC were examined and found to have pearl millet chaff with wild morphologies. In addition to studying sherds by stereomicroscopy and subjecting surface casts to scanning electron microscopy (SEM), we also deployed X-ray microcomputed tomography (microCT) on eleven sherds. This significantly augmented the total dataset of archaeological pearl millet chaff remains from which to document the use of the wild pearl millet as ceramic temper and the evolution of its morphology over time. Grain sizes were also estimated from spikelets preserved in the ceramics. Altogether, we are now able to chart the evolution of domesticated pearl millet in western Africa using three characteristics: the evolution of nonshattering stalked involucres; the appearance of multiple spikelet involucres, usually paired spikelets; and the increase in grain size. By the fourth millennium BC, average grain breadth had increased by 28%, although spikelet features otherwise resemble the wild type. In the third millennium BC, the average width of seeds is 38% greater than that of wild seeds, while other qualitative features of domestication are indicated by the presence of paired spikelets and the appearance of nondehiscent, stalked involucres. Nonshattering spikelets had probably become fixed by around 2000 BC, while increases in average grain size continued into the second millennium BC. These data now provide a robust sequence for the morphological evolution of domesticated pearl millet, the first indigenous crop domesticated in western Africa.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10437-021-09428-8.
在可追溯至公元前第三个千年的陶瓷中发现的驯化珍珠粟((L.) R. Br.)小穗印记,为这种作物在马里北部的种植和驯化过程提供了最早的证据。对同一地区可追溯至公元前第五和第四个千年的其他陶片进行了检查,发现其中有形态为野生的珍珠粟谷壳。除了通过体视显微镜研究陶片并对表面铸型进行扫描电子显微镜(SEM)分析外,我们还对11片陶片进行了X射线显微计算机断层扫描(microCT)。这显著增加了考古珍珠粟谷壳遗迹的总数据集,从中可以记录野生珍珠粟作为陶瓷调和料的使用情况及其形态随时间的演变。还从保存在陶瓷中的小穗估计了谷粒大小。总之,我们现在能够利用三个特征绘制出西非驯化珍珠粟的演变图:不脱落的具柄总苞的演变;多个小穗总苞的出现,通常是成对的小穗;以及谷粒大小的增加。到公元前第四个千年,平均谷粒宽度增加了28%,尽管小穗特征在其他方面类似于野生类型。在公元前第三个千年时,种子的平均宽度比野生种子大38%,而驯化的其他定性特征则通过成对小穗的存在和不裂开的具柄总苞的出现来表明。不脱落的小穗可能在公元前2000年左右就已固定下来,而平均谷粒大小的增加一直持续到公元前第二个千年。这些数据现在为驯化珍珠粟的形态演变提供了一个可靠的序列,珍珠粟是西非最早驯化的本土作物。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s10437-021-09428-8获取的补充材料。