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首页> 外文期刊>Quaternary International >Plants before farming: The deep history of plant-use and representation in the rock art of Australia's Kimberley region
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Plants before farming: The deep history of plant-use and representation in the rock art of Australia's Kimberley region

机译:耕作前的植物:澳大利亚金伯利地区岩石艺术中植物使用和表现的悠久历史

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摘要

The orthodox notion of agriculture cumulatively and inevitably developing from foragers' gathering practices is increasingly untenable. Recent archaeological, botanical and genetic research from Asia and Australia show precocious manipulation of plant resources that continue for millennia within a forager ideology and practice without culminating in ‘agriculture’. Australia's Kimberley is an especially productive research region with a wide range of environmental niches on a topographically varied landscape that has had human settlement spanning over the last 50,000 years. Previously characterised as ‘foragers’ until contact with travellers from Indonesia and then Europeans over the last few hundred years; new research questions this simplistic characterisation of Aboriginal people, and suggests instead a particularly complex and enduring set of people-plant relationships. This complexity is given material witness in the form of Kimberley rock art, which stands out globally in having an enormous body of direct and indirect depictions of plants, including: grasses, trees, tubers; pigment-soaked plants imprinted on rock shelter walls; anthropomorphism of plants; and plant-based material culture such as digging sticks, dilly bags, and wood-hafted stone axe. These are more than simple illustrations of a forager economic base. Instead, rock art is a primary record of long-term sophisticated physical and symbolic manipulation of plants that fits neither into the simplistic categories of ‘foraging’ or of ‘agriculture’. Rather, we have a society in which people actively chose not to pursue orthodox agriculture while according plants a central place in their lives.
机译:农业的正统观念是从觅食者的采集实践中累积而不可避免地发展起来的。来自亚洲和澳大利亚的最新考古,植物学和遗传学研究表明,在觅食者的意识形态和实践中,对植物资源的过早操纵已持续了数千年,而最终并未发展为“农业”。澳大利亚的金伯利(Kimberley)是一个生产力特别高的研究区域,在地形变化多样的景观上拥有广泛的环境生态环境,在过去的50,000年中,人类的住所已经形成。以前被称为“觅食者”,直到过去几百年来一直与印尼和欧洲人接触。新的研究质疑原住民的这种简单化特征,并提出了一套特别复杂且持久的人与植物关系。这种复杂性以金伯利(Kimberley)岩石艺术的形式得到了实质性的见证,在全球范围内以大量的直接和间接的植物描绘而引人注目,其中包括:草,树,块茎;浸泡在岩石掩体墙上的色素浸泡植物;植物的拟人化;以及以植物为基础的物质文化,例如挖木棍,dilly袋和木柄石斧。这些不仅仅是简单的经济基础说明。取而代之的是,岩石艺术是对植物进行长期复杂的物理和符号处理的主要记录,而这两种记录都不适合“觅食”或“农业”等简单的类别。相反,我们有一个社会,人们积极选择不从事正统农业,而将植物视为自己生活中的中心位置。

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