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词条 Peopling of China
释义

  1. Genetic history

     Paternal lineage  Maternal lineage 

  2. Climate history

  3. Settlement patterns

  4. Holocene

  5. See also

  6. References

{{update|date=July 2018}}

In the course of the peopling of the World by Homo sapiens, East Asia was reached before about 50,000 years ago (50 kya). The undifferentiated "non-African" of 70 kya diverged into identifiable

East Asian and West Eurasian lineages by about 50 kya.[1]

This early East Asian lineage diverged further during the Last Glacial Maximum, contributing significantly to the peopling of the Americas via Beringia after about 25 kya.[2]

After the last ice age China became cut off from neighboring island groups.

The modern Mongoloid phenotype develops fully only in the Neolithic (after 10 kya).[3]

Genetic history

{{see|Han_Chinese#Genetics|Mongoloid|Proto-Mongoloid}}

Paternal lineage

Looking at Y-DNA studies, it would seem that one of the earliest groups of humans to reach Asia did so approximately 50-60,000 years ago. People bearing genetic markers ancestral to Haplogroups C and D came through coastal India and proceeded to Southeast Asia. Haplogroup C moved to East Asia, Australia and the Americas. Another group of peoples bearing the Y-DNA Haplogroup D has left descendants in the Andaman islands, Tibet, and Japan.[4][5]

A later group, carrying the Y-DNA haplogroup K was established approximately 40,000-50,000 years ago. Its origins were probably in Southwestern Asia or South Asia.

One branch, Haplogroup Q, believed to have arisen in Central Asia or South Asia approximately 17,000 to 22,000 years ago, went north to populate Siberia and the Americas. Some northern Chinese have this genetic marker. Another branch, Haplogroups N and O, went south and by 35,000 years ago went on to populate first Southeast Asia and then East Asia.

The ancestors of the Han Chinese left Southeast Asia about 12,000 years ago, along with other O3‐M122 lineages, and reached the upper and middle Yellow River basin. About 7000 years ago, they and the ancestors of the Tibetans split off from that parent group. About 6,000 years ago, the Han Chinese split from the Proto‐Sino‐Tibetan group, and started their migration to the east and south. About 5,000 years ago, the Han Chinese experienced rapid expansion, with notable gene flow with surrounding populations.

[6]

Thus before the Xia dynasty, (est 2000 - 1500 BC) for which there are no written records or direct archeological evidence, the Han Chinese were in rapid expansion.

This corresponds to the late period (2600 to 2000 BC) of the Longshan culture in the middle Yellow River area. As the Neolithic population in China reached its peak, the number of settlements increased. In some locations, such as the basin of the Fen River in southern Shanxi, the Yellow River in western Henan (confined by the Zhongtiao Mountains and Xiao Mountains) and the coastal Rizhao plain of southeast Shandong, a few very large (over 200 ha) centers developed. In more open areas, such as the rest of Shandong, the Central Plain (in Henan) and the Wei River basin in Shaanxi, local centers were more numerous, smaller (generally 20 to 60 ha) and fairly evenly spaced. Walls of rammed earth have been found in 20 towns in Shandong, 9 in the Central Plain and one (Taosi) in southern Shanxi, suggesting conflict between polities in these areas.[7]{{Circular reference|date=March 2019}}

It could be due the impetus of the collective benefit of the construction of irrigation works in the late Neolithic.

"Most of the labor to dike and drain an area is associated with digging a ditch and sidecasting the soil to make an earthen dike. To make the culvert and tide gate you can use an old worn-out canoe for the pipe .... and use just about any good-sized flat stones you can get your hands on. If you have twice as many people making your dike, you can make twice as many linear feet of dike. Doubling the perimeter of a square dike results in quadrupling the area within the dike."[8]

The agricultural surplus would have allowed for a rapidly expanding population, which would provide more labor for irrigation.

By the time of the establishment of the Xia and Shang dynasties, estimates of their population are approximately 13 million people.[9]

Study of DNA remains from the Central Plains area of China 3000 years ago shows close affinity between that population and those of Northern Han today in both the Y-DNA and mtDNA. Both northern and southern Han show similar Y-DNA genetic structure.

[10]

Maternal lineage

Mitochondrial DNA likewise supports the hypothesis that the ancestors of the Chinese came to Asia from Africa. The M Haplogroup, a descendant of the African L3 Haplogroup, originated somewhere between Africa, India and Central Asia. This marker alone is carried by all populations in South Asia, Southeast Asia, East Asia, Oceania, and most of the Ameridian populations.[11]

Study of DNA remains from 3000 years ago show increasing diversity in mtDNA as the distance south and southwestward increase from the Central Plains area, indicating a male bias in the demic diffusion.

[12]

Climate history

During the Last Glacial Maximum, 29,000 to 18,000 years ago, northern China was a treeless steppe with areas of permafrost and southern China lost much of its forest cover. The sea level was much lower. Borneo, Indonesia, the Philippines, and the Japanese archipelago may have been accessible by land.

With the end of the last ice age, a period of warming occurred lasting from 18,000 to 10,000 years ago. The oceans rose and inundated vast regions leaving little trace of coastal settlements used by these people. We know little about their languages. Their cultures are likely to have been diverse. There are many limestone cave sites in southern China which show human settlements. There is evidence of pottery making. The inhabitants had bone tools, fished, and hunted pigs and deer.[13]

It is believed that the climate in southern China was warmer and wetter south of the Qing Ling mountains; elephants are known to have inhabited the Yangtze river region. The climate in Northeast China north of present-day Beijing was characterized as a cold steppe environment during this period. The presence of woolly mammoth is well documented.[14]

The climate was also much warmer between 8,000 and 3,500 years ago. In the Shandong region, excavations have found the bones of alligators and elephants.

The development of agriculture about 10,000 years ago, with the domestication of millet in the Yellow River valley region and rice in the Yangtze River valley, may have been associated with accelerated growth in the number and size of settlements and the intensified development of local cultures and languages.[15]

Settlement patterns

Early settlements in the Chinese Upper Paleolithic were either hunter-gatherer societies, or marine environment based societies characterized by shell middens.[16] Relatively speaking the land was sparsely populated, as the peoples followed the coastal regions and the river valleys.

Neolithic settlements have been found from Liaoning province in the northeast to the Chengdu region in the southwest; from Gansu province in the northwest to sites in Fujian in the southeast. The settlement pattern in the Tibetan region is yet unclear, as there is debate as to whether there was a pre-Neolithic population movement into the region.[17]

Holocene

{{see|History of China}}

The origin of Sino-Tibetan is uncertain. It dates to the Neolithic, or just before the Neolithic. There are various proposals. Van Driem (2005) proposes that Sino-Tibetan originated in the Sichuan Basin before 7000 BC, with an early migration into northeast India, and a later migration north of the predecessors of Chinese and Tibetic.{{sfnp|van Driem|2005|pp=91-95}} Matisoff (1991) places its origins in the eastern part of the Tibetan plateau around 4000 BC, with the various groups migrating out down the Yellow, Yangtze, Mekong, Salween and Brahmaputra rivers.{{sfnp|Matisoff|1991|pp=470–471}} Blench and Post (2014) have proposed that the Sino-Tibetan homeland is northeast India, the area of greatest diversity, around 7000 BC.{{sfnp|Blench|Post|2014|p=89}} Blench (2009)[18] proposes that the earliest speakers of Sino-Tibetan were not agriculturalists, since agriculture cannot be reconstructed for Proto-Sino-Tibetan. Rather, early Sino-Tibetan speakers were highly diverse foragers.

The Mon-Khmer languages may also have originated in what is now China, and would have entered Southeast Asia via Yunnan and the Mekong. The Miao, Thai, Burmese, and Tibetan languages may have evolved in China. It may even be that some proto-Austronesian speakers left China for Formosa and on to the islands of the Pacific. By 3,000 years ago, the sophistication of some of the cultures neighboring that of the Han Chinese can be seen in the bronzes of Sanxingdui (Sichuan), Ban Chiang (Thailand) and Dong Son (Vietnam).

The domestication of the horse 6,000 years ago in the Eurasian steppes led to cultures that mixed animal husbandry and agriculture. Indo-European speakers are known to have reached the Xinjiang region and perhaps further east 4,000 years ago.

Because the East Asian landmass was initially populated from the south, and the historical record shows the Han Chinese migrating to the south and southwest, the genetic relationship among all the peoples of China is unclear.{{huh|date=July 2018}}[19]

See also

  • List of Paleolithic sites in China
  • Han_Chinese#Genetics
  • Peopling of the world
  • List of first human settlements

References

1. ^A. Seguin-Orlando et al., "Genomic structure in Europeans dating back at least 36,200 years", Science, 6 November 2014, DOI: 10.1126/science.aaa0114.
2. ^{{Citation| title = Terminal Pleistocene Alaskan genome reveals first founding population of Native Americans | journal = Nature | volume = 553 | issue = 7687 | pages = 203–207 | doi = 10.1038/nature25173 | pmid = 29323294 | year = 2018 | last1 = Moreno-Mayar | first1 = J. Víctor | last2 = Potter | first2 = Ben A. | last3 = Vinner | first3 = Lasse | last4 = Steinrücken | first4 = Matthias | last5 = Rasmussen | first5 = Simon | last6 = Terhorst | first6 = Jonathan | last7 = Kamm | first7 = John A. | last8 = Albrechtsen | first8 = Anders | last9 = Malaspinas | first9 = Anna-Sapfo | last10 = Sikora | first10 = Martin | last11 = Reuther | first11 = Joshua D. | last12 = Irish | first12 = Joel D. | last13 = Malhi | first13 = Ripan S. | last14 = Orlando | first14 = Ludovic | last15 = Song | first15 = Yun S. | last16 = Nielsen | first16 = Rasmus | last17 = Meltzer | first17 = David J. | last18 = Willerslev | first18 = Eske | url = http://researchonline.ljmu.ac.uk/7887/1/UpwardSun_Nature%20paper%20MS%20DEC17.pdf }}
3. ^Matt Cartmill, Fred H. Smith, The Human Lineage, John Wiley & Sons (2009), [https://books.google.rs/books?id=5TRHOmTUTP4C&pg=PA449#v=onepage&q&f=false p. 449].
4. ^{{cite web |title=Asian Ancestry based on Studies of Y-DNA Variation: Part 1 Early origins — roots from Africa and emergence in East Asia |work=Genebase Tutorials |url=http://www.genebase.com/learning/article/21}}
5. ^{{cite journal |vauthors=Shi H, Zhong H, Peng Y, etal |title=Y chromosome evidence of earliest modern human settlement in East Asia and multiple origins of Tibetan and Japanese populations |journal=BMC Biol. |volume=6 |pages=45 |year=2008 |pmid=18959782 |pmc=2605740 |doi=10.1186/1741-7007-6-45 }}
6. ^ https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1759-6831.2012.00244.x |"Late Neolithic expansion of ancient Chinese revealed by Y chromosome haplogroup O3a1c‐002611"
7. ^{{Cite web | url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longshan_culture | title=Longshan culture}}
8. ^{{Cite web | url=https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-most-impressive-engineering-feat-in-history-relative-to-the-resources-available-at-the-time | title=What is the most impressive engineering feat in history relative to the resources available at the time? - Quora}}
9. ^https://docslide.net/documents/relocation-of-civilization-centers-in-ancient-china-environmental-factors.html| "Relocation of Civilization Centers in Ancient China: Environmental Factors"
10. ^ https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0125676| "Ancient DNA Reveals That the Genetic Structure of the Northern Han Chinese Was Shaped Prior to 3,000 Years Ago"
11. ^{{cite journal | pmc = 384943 | pmid=11836649 | doi=10.1086/338999 | volume=70 | issue=3 | title=Phylogeographic differentiation of mitochondrial DNA in Han Chinese |date=March 2002 | journal=Am. J. Hum. Genet. | pages=635–51 | last1 = Yao | first1 = Y | last2 = Kong | first2 = Q | last3 = Bandelt | first3 = H | last4 = Kivisild | first4 = T | last5 = Zhang | first5 = Y}}
12. ^{{Cite journal | doi=10.1371/journal.pone.0125676| pmid=25938511| pmc=4418768|title = Ancient DNA Reveals That the Genetic Structure of the Northern Han Chinese Was Shaped Prior to 3,000 Years Ago| journal=PLOS ONE| volume=10| issue=5| pages=e0125676|year = 2015|last1 = Zhao|first1 = Yong-Bin| last2=Zhang| first2=Ye| last3=Zhang| first3=Quan-Chao| last4=Li| first4=Hong-Jie| last5=Cui| first5=Ying-Qiu| last6=Xu| first6=Zhi| last7=Jin| first7=Li| last8=Zhou| first8=Hui| last9=Zhu| first9=Hong}}
13. ^{{cite journal |author1=Zhang Chi |author2=Hsiao-Chun Hung |title=The Neolithic of Southern China-Origin, Development, and Dispersal |journal=Asian Perspectives |volume=47 |issue=2 |pages=299–329 |date=Fall 2008 |doi=10.1353/asi.0.0004 |hdl=10125/17291 }}
14. ^{{cite journal |last=Shelach |first=Gideon |title=The Earliest Neolithic Cultures of Northeast China: Recent Discoveries and New Perspectives on the Beginning of Agriculture |journal=Journal of World Prehistory |volume=14 |issue=4 |pages=363–413 |date=December 2000 |doi=10.1023/A:1011124209079 }}
15. ^{{cite journal |author1=Zhang Chi |author2=Hsiao-chun Hun |title=The emergence of agriculture in southern China |journal=Antiquity |volume=84 |issue=323 |pages=11–25 |date=March 2010 |url=http://antiquity.ac.uk/ant/084/ant0840011.htm|doi=10.1017/S0003598X00099737 }}
16. ^{{cite journal |author1=Higham, C.F.W. |author2=Xie Guangmao |author3=Lin Qiang |title=The prehistory of a Friction Zone: first farmers and hunters-gatherers in Southeast Asia |journal=Antiquity |volume=85 |issue=328 |pages=529–543 |date=June 2011 |url=http://antiquity.ac.uk/ant/085/ant0850529.htm|doi=10.1017/S0003598X00067922 }}
17. ^{{cite journal |last1=Aldenderfer |first1=Mark |author2=Zhang Yinong |title=The Prehistory of the Tibetan Plateau to the Seventh Century A.D.: Perspectives and Research from China and the West Since 1950 |journal=Journal of World Prehistory |volume=18 |issue=1 |pages=1–55 |date=March 2004 |doi=10.1023/B:JOWO.0000038657.79035.9e }}
18. ^Blench, Roger. 2009. If agriculture cannot be reconstructed for Proto-Sino-Tibetan, what are the consequences?. Paper presented at the 42nd International Conference on Sino-Tibetan Language and Linguistics (ICSTLL 42), Chiang Mai, November 2-4, 2009. (slides)
19. ^{{cite journal |vauthors=Black ML, Wise CA, Wang W, Bittles AH |title=Combining genetics and population history in the study of ethnic diversity in the People's Republic of China |journal=Hum. Biol. |volume=78 |issue=3 |pages=277–93 |date=June 2006 |pmid=17216801 |doi=10.1353/hub.2006.0041 |url=http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/id/eprint/10968/ }}

2 : History of ancient China|Peopling of East Asia

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