The Published Archaeobotanical Data from the Indus Civilisation, South Asia, c.3200–1500BC

IF 1.1 0 ARCHAEOLOGY Journal of Open Archaeology Data Pub Date : 2019-08-06 DOI:10.5334/JOAD.57
J. Bates
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引用次数: 15

Abstract

The collection of this dataset of published archaeobotanical data from the Indus Civilisation (c.3200–1500BC) was carried out by the author as part of her doctoral work, and has continued up to October 2017. The dataset represents a systematic collation of all primary published macrobotanical data, regardless of their designation as ‘crop’, ‘fully domesticated’ or ‘wild/weedy’ species. The dataset comprises 63 sites and 339 ‘taxa’ (including less confidently identified elements such as ‘charred seed’). Data is presented as presence/absence due to different sampling, quantification and data presentation practices. Funding statement: This paper developed out of research conducted while the author was a PhD student working as part of the Land, Water and Settlement project, which has been investigating human–environment relations in northwest India. It presents material gathered for a literature review that formed part of the author’s PhD dissertation, and expanded upon during her first post-doctoral position as Trevelyan research fellow at Selwyn College, University of Cambridge. The PhD research was funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), United Kingdom (Grant No. 1080510), and this paper has been written up while she has been a Post-doctoral Research Associate at the Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World, Brown University, and published while she is a post doctoral fellow at the Department of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania. The Land, Water and Settlement project ran from 2007 to 2014 and was primarily funded by a Standard Award from the UK India Education Research Initiative United Kingdom (UKIERI) under the title ‘From the collapse of Harappan urbanism to the rise of the great Early Historic cities: Investigating the cultural and geographical transformation of northwest India between 2000 and 300 BC’. Smaller grants were also awarded by the British Academy’s Stein Arnold Fund, United Kingdom, the Isaac Newton Trust, the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, United Kingdom, and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), United Kingdom.
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已发表的印度河文明考古数据,南亚,约公元前3200–1500年
作为博士工作的一部分,作者收集了印度河文明(约公元前3200–1500年)已发表的考古植物学数据集,并一直持续到2017年10月。该数据集代表了对所有主要发表的宏植物学数据的系统整理,无论它们被指定为“作物”、“完全驯化”或“野生/杂草”物种。该数据集包括63个位点和339个“分类群”(包括不太确定的元素,如“烧焦的种子”)。由于不同的采样、量化和数据呈现实践,数据以存在/不存在的形式呈现。资金声明:这篇论文是在作者还是一名博士生时进行的研究,该研究是土地、水和定居点项目的一部分,该项目一直在调查印度西北部的人类与环境关系。它提供了为文献综述收集的材料,该文献综述构成了作者博士论文的一部分,并在她担任剑桥大学塞尔温学院特雷维廉研究员的第一个博士后职位期间进行了扩展。这项博士研究由英国艺术与人文研究委员会(AHRC)资助(批准号1080510),本文是在她担任布朗大学茹科夫斯基考古与古代世界研究所博士后研究员期间撰写的,并在她担任人类学系博士后研究员期间发表,宾夕法尼亚大学。土地、水和定居点项目从2007年持续到2014年,主要由英国-印度教育研究倡议联合王国(UKIERI)的标准奖资助,标题为“从哈拉潘城市主义的崩溃到伟大的早期历史城市的崛起:调查公元前2000年至公元前300年印度西北部的文化和地理转型”。英国科学院的斯坦·阿诺德基金、艾萨克·牛顿信托基金、英国麦克唐纳考古研究所和英国自然环境研究委员会也提供了较小的赠款。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
14.30%
发文量
5
审稿时长
21 weeks
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