To waste or not to waste: a multi-proxy analysis of human-waste interaction and rural waste management in Indus Era Gujarat

IF 2.1 2区 地球科学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences Pub Date : 2024-08-05 DOI:10.1007/s12520-024-02046-w
Kalyan Sekhar Chakraborty, Sheahan Bestel, Mary Lucus, Patrick Roberts, Prabodh Shirvalkar, Yadubirsingh Rawat, Thomas Larsen, Heather M. -L. Miller
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Abstract

Waste management is paramount to town planning and ancient civilizations across the world have spent resources and mobilized labor for waste disposal and reuse. The study of waste management practices offers a unique window into the daily lives, social organization, and environmental interactions of ancient societies. In the Indus Valley Civilization, known for its urban planning, understanding waste disposal in rural settlements provides crucial insights into the broader socio-economic landscape. While extensive research has documented sophisticated waste management systems in urban Indus centers, little is known about practices in rural settlements. This gap limits our understanding of regional variations and rural-urban dynamics within the civilization. In this paper, using isotopic and microscopic proxies, we characterize the waste disposed of at the rural Indus settlement of Kotada Bhadli to reconstruct the sources of waste, including heated animal dung, and burned vegetation. We propose that rural agro-pastoral settlements in Gujarat during the Indus Era systematically discarded such waste in specific locations. By characterizing waste produced at Kotada Bhadli, we are also able to reconstruct the natural environment and how the natural and cultural landscape around the settlement was exploited by the residents of the settlement for their domestic and occupational needs. Our identification of the attention paid to waste disposal by the inhabitants of Kotada Bhadli adds significant data to our understanding of waste disposal as an insight into past lives.

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浪费还是不浪费:印度河时代古吉拉特邦人与废物互动及农村废物管理的多代理分析
废物管理是城市规划的重中之重,世界各地的古代文明都为废物处理和再利用投入了资源和劳动力。对废物管理实践的研究为了解古代社会的日常生活、社会组织和环境互动提供了一个独特的窗口。印度河流域文明以城市规划著称,了解农村居住区的废物处理情况,对了解更广泛的社会经济状况至关重要。虽然大量研究记录了印度河流域城市中心复杂的废物管理系统,但对农村定居点的做法却知之甚少。这一空白限制了我们对该文明内部地区差异和城乡动态的了解。在本文中,我们利用同位素和微观代用指标,描述了印度河流域农村聚落 Kotada Bhadli 处理废物的特征,以重建废物的来源,包括加热的动物粪便和焚烧的植被。我们提出,印度河时代古吉拉特邦的农村农牧定居点会在特定地点系统地丢弃这些废物。通过对 Kotada Bhadli 所产生废物的特征描述,我们还能够重建当时的自然环境,以及该聚落周围的自然和文化景观是如何被聚落居民利用来满足其家庭和职业需求的。我们对科塔达-巴德利居民对废物处理的关注的鉴定,为我们了解废物处理作为对过去生活的一种洞察,增添了重要的数据。
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来源期刊
Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences
Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY-
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
18.20%
发文量
199
期刊介绍: Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences covers the full spectrum of natural scientific methods with an emphasis on the archaeological contexts and the questions being studied. It bridges the gap between archaeologists and natural scientists providing a forum to encourage the continued integration of scientific methodologies in archaeological research. Coverage in the journal includes: archaeology, geology/geophysical prospection, geoarchaeology, geochronology, palaeoanthropology, archaeozoology and archaeobotany, genetics and other biomolecules, material analysis and conservation science. The journal is endorsed by the German Society of Natural Scientific Archaeology and Archaeometry (GNAA), the Hellenic Society for Archaeometry (HSC), the Association of Italian Archaeometrists (AIAr) and the Society of Archaeological Sciences (SAS).
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