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Microfossil evidence of land-use intensification in north Thailand
Institution:1. Muséum national d''Histoire naturelle, UMR 7194 CNRS-MNHN-UPVD, Institut de Paléontologie Humaine, 1 rue René-Panhard, 75013 Paris, France;2. Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts, 227 Kbal Thnal, Preah Norodom Boulevard, Sangkat Tonle Bassac, Khan Chamkar Mon, Phnom Penh 12305, Cambodia;3. Muséum national d''Histoire naturelle, UMR 7194 CNRS–MNHN–UPVD, Musée de l''Homme, 17, place du Trocadéro et du 11 novembre, 75116 Paris, France;4. Université de Perpignan Via Domitia, UMR 7194 CNRS–MNHN–UPVD, Centre Européen de Recherches Préhistoriques, Avenue Léon-Jean Grégory, 66720 Tautavel, France;5. INRAP, UMR 7209 CNRS–MNHN, 36 Avenue Paul Vaillant-Couturier, F93120 La Courneuve, France;6. UMR 7207 CNRS–MNHN–UPMC, CR2P, Sorbonne universités, Université Pierre-et-Marie-Curie, case 104, T. 56-46, 4, place Jussieu, 75252 Paris Cedex 05, France;7. Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1, Laboratoire de géologie de Lyon (TPE), UMR5275 CNRS, 2 rue Dubois, 69 622 Villeurbanne Cedex, France;8. 13, rue Julien, 69 003 Lyon, France;9. UMR 208 IRD-MNHN, 57, rue Cuvier, 75005 Paris, France
Abstract:Palaeo-environmental data from accumulated lake sediments at Phayao, northwest Thailand, provide a record of vegetation and environmental change from approximately 20,000 years Before Present. This is an important region archaeologically, with claims in the 1970s for an ‘early’ transition to domestication having arisen from a number of cave sites. Multiple indices are used to determine if people had an observable impact on the natural environment, and to determine the timing and magnitude of impacts associated with the development of agricultural land use in the region. An initial increase in sedimentation rate is apparent from ca. mid-2nd C AD. Changes in phytoplankton concentrations are apparent from the late 3rd C AD, and evidence for initial forest disturbance is apparent from the 5th or 6th C AD, with impacts becoming more severe over time to reach a pre-modern maximum in the 11th to the 13th C AD. Changes in agricultural practices are apparent during the 14th C AD, with an increased emphasis on rice agriculture and incipient management of the regenerating forests. Based on these data we suggest that agricultural intensification in the early part of the 1st millennium AD destabilised catchment slopes, through clearance of dryland vegetation and swidden agriculture. There is no direct evidence for the impacts of earlier peoples on the vegetation of the area, which we take to indicate that agricultural intensification was later here than in the lowlands to the east and south.
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