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      UCL Press journals including Archaeology Internation have now moved website.

      You will now find the journal, all publications and submission information, at https://journals.uclpress.co.uk/ai

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      The International Centre for Chinese Heritage and Archaeology (ICCHA): After a Decade of Success

        ,
      Archaeology International
      Ubiquity Press, Ltd.

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          The domestication process and domestication rate in rice: spikelet bases from the Lower Yangtze.

          The process of rice domestication occurred in the Lower Yangtze region of Zhejiang, China, between 6900 and 6600 years ago. Archaeobotanical evidence from the site of Tianluoshan shows that the proportion of nonshattering domesticated rice (Oryza sativa) spikelet bases increased over this period from 27% to 39%. Over the same period, rice remains increased from 8% to 24% of all plant remains, which suggests an increased consumption relative to wild gathered foods. In addition, an assemblage of annual grasses, sedges, and other herbaceous plants indicates the presence of arable weeds, typical of cultivated rice, that also increased over this period.
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            Archaeobotanical and GIS-based approaches to prehistoric agriculture in the upper Ying valley, Henan, China

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              The Early Rice Project: From Domestication to Global Warming

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Archaeology International
                AI
                Ubiquity Press, Ltd.
                2048-4194
                November 23 2015
                Article
                10.5334/ai.1806
                d1adf695-75e8-46d9-9fef-a829ecc73a5a
                © 2015

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/

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