
- Journal of Geographical Sciences
- Vol. 30, Issue 3, 423 (2020)
Abstract
Keywords
1 Introduction
Holocene human-environment interactions, which rapidly increased human activities presented a complex relationship with environment, are attractive and perfect case researches of geoarchaeology. Hydro-environmental evolution, which has been proved in many case studies, also played an important role in human activities and cultural evolution as climate, landform, soil, vegetation and so on. Research in the eastern Sahara desert, west of the Nile, suggested that the area with surface water resource was the key factor which influenced the adaptation strategies of the mobile hunter-gatherers in the desert regions (
The Neolithic cultures in Jianghan-Dongting Basin of the middle Yangtze River originated 9000 years ago, which was a comparatively independent system, played an important role in Chinese prehistoric civilization (
Based on the comprehensive analyses of 18 core profiles’ sedimentary sequences and lithological characteristics in Jianghan-Dongting Basin of the middle Yangtze River and the spatial-temporal distribution of archeological sites in this area, we reconstructed the Holocene hydro-environmental evolution of the study area, and discussed its relationship with human activities.
2 Study area
The Jianghan-Dongting Basin, lying in the middle Yangtze River, is composed of Jianghan Plain north of the river and Dongting Basin south of the river. The Jianghan Plain is located in the south-central Hubei Province and the Dongting Basin in the northern Hunan Province, which are divided by Huarong Uplift. The Jianghan-Dongting Basin is surrounded by mountains with alluvial-lacustrine plain in the center. There are developed drainage systems in the study area, where the Yangtze and its tributaries are the major rivers. The Dongting Lake is the largest lake in the area (
Figure 1.Figure 1
2.1 Geomorphological setting
The Jianghan-Dongting Basin is surrounded by mountains, such as Jingshan, Dahongshan, Tongbaishan and Dabieshan on the north, Mubushan on the east, Xuefengshan on the south and Wulingshan on the east. Hills are distributed between mountains and plains. The inner part of the plain mainly consists of high alluvial plain, alluvial-lacustrine plain, and low mountains and hills with loess scattering around. The landform of the high alluvial plain (30-40 m asl) located at the edge of the basin, front of the mountains, especially on both banks of the Yangtze River in the west basin is flat and its main deposited sediments are Quaternary fluvial deposition. The alluvial-lacustrine plain (30 m asl) is the central part of the basin with the flattest landform and the Quaternary lacustrine deposits. The hills (>200 m asl) in the basin spread on Taohuashan, Huangshantou and so on. The Loess Plateau which is constituted by the mid-late Pleistocene laterite and loess is distributed in the inner plain of the basin with elevations of 1-2 m higher than the surroundings.
There are dense rivers and lakes in the Jianghan-Dongting Basin. The Yangtze River flows into the basin from the northwest, and turns to the northeast at Yueyang, then eastward outflow the basin at Wuhan, which created many oxbow lakes in the border area of Hubei and Hunan provinces. In the north basin, the Hanshui River, the largest tributary of the Yangtze River, enters the Jianghan Plain from the north and flows toward southeast, and turns to east at Tianmen, into the Yangtze River at Hankou. In the south basin, there is the Dongting Lake hydrographic net, including Xiangshui River, Zishui River, Ruanshui River and Lishui River. These rivers together with the Yangtze River, Hanshui River, and other tributaries constitute the river network of the Jianghan-Dongting Basin. Depressions between rivers always developed into interfluvial lakes (
Figure 2.Figure 2
2.2 Archaeological backgrounds
As the archaeological works rapidly propelled, the Neolithic sequence of the Jianghan-Dongting Basin is more and more clear (
2.2.1 The early-Neolithic
The earliest Neolithic culture in the middle reaches of the Yangtze River is Pengtoushan culture (8.5-7.8 ka BP), which centered in the Liyang Plain of the Dongtong Lake area. Gathering and hunting were the principal subsistence means of the Pengtoushan culture, and early rice agricultural activities had begun, while moated settlements formed. The following Zaoshixiaceng culture (7.8-6.9 ka BP) and Tangjiagang culture (6.9-6.3 ka BP) still occupied the Dongting Basin. Meanwhile, the Chengbeixi culture (7.8-6.3 ka BP), which originated from Pengtoushan culture, was found on both banks of the Yangtze River in western Hubei Province. In the Jianghan Plain, Bianfan culture (6.9-5.9 ka BP), which was characterized by a mixed local and Yellow River culture, developed along the Hanshui River.
2.2.2 The middle-Neolithic
The Daxi culture (6.3-5.5 ka BP), a follow-up of the Chengbeixi culture, spread over the Jianghan-Dongting Basin and the Three Gorges Area. In this period, the Chinese earliest prehistoric city, Chengtoushan site was constructed in the Dongting Basin. Rice farming was further developed, paddy fields as well as irrigation system, were discovered (
2.2.3 The late-Neolithic
Qujialing culture (5.3-4.5 ka BP) occupied and spread all over the middle Yangtze region. Culture prosperity and many prehistoric settlements and city sites occurred in this period (
3 Hydro-environmental evolution
According to the evolutional history of environment and cultures (
Number | Name | Location | References |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Songzibabao188 | Babao town, Songzi city, Jingzhou city, Hubei province | |
2 | MHK02 | Mahaokou town, Gongan county, Hubei province | |
3 | JZ-2010 | Jiangbei farm, Jiangling district, Jingzhou city, Hubei province | |
4 | Zhangjinhai345 | Zhangjin town, Qianjiang city, Hubei province | |
5 | 47 | Liuheyuan farm, Jiangling district, Jingzhou city, Hubei province | |
6 | QS01 | Qinshi town, Jiangling district, Jingzhou city, Hubei province | |
7 | Xingou | Xingou town, Jianli county, Hubei province | |
8 | Zhoulao | Zhoulao town, Jianli county, Hubei province | |
9 | WS03 | Yijiawan, Wangshi town, Jianli county, Hubei province | |
10 | M1 | Miancheng town, Xiantao city, Hubei province | |
11 | DTH01 | Datonghu farm, Honghu city, Hubei province | |
12 | Chunliang- ling454 | Chunliangling, Xiantao city, Hubei province | |
13 | ZK76 | Caidian district, Wuhan city, Hubei province | |
14 | ZK84 | Mentangwan, Jiangxia district, Wuhan city, Hubei province | |
15 | Wanzikou274 | Wanzikou, Shishou city, Jingzhou city, Hubei province | |
16 | CK37 | The western Dongting lake region, Hunan province | |
17 | CK21 | Zhuzikou town, Huarong county, Hunan province | |
18 | ZK01 | Zhuzikou town, Huarong county, Hunan province |
Table 1.
The list of sediment cores
Figure 3.Figure 3
In the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), while rainfall reduced, the base level of erosion decreased due to sea level decline. The rivers in the middle Yangtze River were severely cutting down and the lakes dried up under the impact of headward erosion, which led to the landscape of plain with deeply incised valleys. The water level of the study area was in the lowest position. As the accumulation of sand gravel formed in glacial period, the riverbeds were aggrading. Until the last stage of late Pleistocene, the lakes spread from the incised valleys and low-lying area (
3.1 Period I (>11.5-5.5 ka BP)
The JZ-2010 profile (112°22°02E, 30°11°01N) (
Figure 4.Figure 4
The ZK01 core (
3.2 Period II (5.5-4.0 ka BP)
At the last stage of mid-Holocene, the sediment characteristics obviously changed. At the JZ-2010 (
The sea level of East China fell about 5.5 ka BP (
3.3 Period III (after 4.0 ka BP)
The significant changes of sedimentary characteristics happened in late-Holocene. The Miancheng M1 core (113°13°E, 30°12°N) (
The ZK01 in Dongting Lake showed the decreasing coarse silt and the increasing fine silt and clay, indicating the lake level was rising (
Apart from climate changes (
4 Human-environment interaction
The water level of rivers and lakes in the middle Yangtze River rose in 11.5-5.5 ka BP, and fell in 5.5-4.0 ka BP, and then rose again around 4.0 ka BP. The three periods of water level fluctuation influenced the human occupation, agricultural activities and the development of Neolithic culture.
4.1 8.5-5.5 ka BP
In the early-mid Holocene the cultural sequence in the Dongting Lake and the western Jianghan Plain were Pengtoushan, Zaoshixiaceng, Chengbeixi, Tangjiagang and Daxi. Meanwhile in the northern Jianghan Plain there were Bianfan and Youziling cultures. In 8.5-6.3 ka BP (Pengtoushan, Zaoshixiaceng, Chengbeixi, Tangjiagang, and Bianfan cultures), there were a few settlements (Figures 5a and 6) in the piedmont plains (
Figure 5.Figure 5
Figure 6.Figure 6
4.2 5.5-4.0 ka BP
In the last stage of mid-Holocene, the Neolithic cultures in the Jianghan-Dongting Basin were the Qujialing culture (5.3-4.5 ka BP) and the early-mid Shijiahe culture (4.5-4.2 ka BP). The number of settlements increased and spread into the fluvio-lacustrine plain, and the number of settlements in the Jianghan Plain was larger than that of Dongting Basin in the Qujialing period (
The process of cultural development was bound up with the hydro-environmental evolution. Around 5.5 ka BP, the drop of water level of the middle Yangtze River reduced the range of lakes so that the range of lands for human occupation expanded, which was beneficial to the increase of the number of settlements. For another, the large fertile fields in plains were suitable for rice cultivation, promoting rice farming to be gradually overwhelmingly important in economic subsistence, which supported densely populated regions’ cultural development. Researches in the lower Yangtze River had revealed sea level at a low position 5.0-4.5 ka BP when the Liangzhu culture (5.3-4.3 ka BP) developed (
4.3 After 4.0 ka BP
The rising of water level at about 4.0 ka BP may be one of the main causes for the collapse of the Shijiahe culture. The aggradation in the incised valleys from late Pleistocene led the central Jianghan-Dongting Plain to a flat flood-prone fluvio-lacustrine plain around 4.0 ka BP, and intensified by the rising water level of the middle Yangtze River due to sea level rise (
5 Conclusion
Analysis of the 18 core profiles’ sedimentary sequences and lithological characteristics in the Jianghan-Dongting Basin of the middle reaches of the Yangtze River and the spatial-temporal distribution of the archeological sites in this area shows the Holocene hydro-environmental evolution and its relationship with human activities.
From the last stage of late Pleistocene the water level was rising quickly, then the rate of rising became slower at about 7.0 ka BP. Around 5.5 ka BP the water level slightly decreased, and around 4.0 ka BP, water level increased again.
The forcing mechanisms of water environmental evolution were the driver of the sea level change and the aggradation of fluvio-lacustrine sediments. The increasing sea level resulted in water level rising, and the decreasing sea level resulted in water level falling. The aggradation of fluvio-lacustrine sediments made the study area prone to flood which intensified the influence of water level rise.
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