TY - JOUR
T1 - Emergence and Diversification of the Neolithic in Southern Vietnam
T2 - Insights From Coastal Rach Nui
AU - Oxenham, Marc F.
AU - Piper, Philip J.
AU - Bellwood, Peter
AU - Bui, Chi Hoang
AU - Nguyen, Khanh Trung Kien
AU - Nguyen, Quoc Manh
AU - Campos, Fredeliza
AU - Castillo, Cristina
AU - Wood, Rachel
AU - Sarjeant, Carmen
AU - Amano, Noel
AU - Willis, Anna
AU - Ceron, Jasminda
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015, Copyright © Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
PY - 2015/9/2
Y1 - 2015/9/2
N2 - We examine the southern Vietnamese site of Rach Nui, dated to between 3390 and 3850 cal BP, in the context of three major aspects of the Neolithic in Mainland Southeast Asia: mound formation and chronology, construction techniques, and subsistence economy. Results indicate that this ca. 75 m in diameter, 5 m high mound, comprising over a dozen phases of earthen platforms, upon which were raised sophisticated wooden structures, was built in <200 years. While consuming domesticated millet, rice, and occasionally dogs and pigs, the main subsistence orientation included managed tubers and fruits and a range of mangrove ecosystem taxa: catfishes, turtles, crocodiles, monitor lizards, macaques and langurs, to name a few. This combined vegeculture-foraging lifeway in a mangrove forested environment, likely in the context of a tradable goods extractive industry, adds to a growing picture of significant diversity, and sophisticated construction skills in the Southeast Asian Neolithic.
AB - We examine the southern Vietnamese site of Rach Nui, dated to between 3390 and 3850 cal BP, in the context of three major aspects of the Neolithic in Mainland Southeast Asia: mound formation and chronology, construction techniques, and subsistence economy. Results indicate that this ca. 75 m in diameter, 5 m high mound, comprising over a dozen phases of earthen platforms, upon which were raised sophisticated wooden structures, was built in <200 years. While consuming domesticated millet, rice, and occasionally dogs and pigs, the main subsistence orientation included managed tubers and fruits and a range of mangrove ecosystem taxa: catfishes, turtles, crocodiles, monitor lizards, macaques and langurs, to name a few. This combined vegeculture-foraging lifeway in a mangrove forested environment, likely in the context of a tradable goods extractive industry, adds to a growing picture of significant diversity, and sophisticated construction skills in the Southeast Asian Neolithic.
KW - building technology
KW - coastal adaptation
KW - mangrove ecosystem
KW - mound construction
KW - vegeculture-foraging subsistence
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84945456195&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/15564894.2014.980473
DO - 10.1080/15564894.2014.980473
M3 - Article
SN - 1556-4894
VL - 10
SP - 309
EP - 338
JO - Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology
JF - Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology
IS - 3
ER -