Sedentism, Agriculture, and the Neolithic Demographic Transition| Insights from Jomon Paleodemography

<p>A paleodemographic analysis was conducted using skeletal data from J?mon period sites in Japan. 15P5 ratios were produced as proxy birth rate values for sites throughout the J?mon period. Previous studies based on numbers of residential sites indicated a substantial population increase in t...

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Main Author: Noxon, Corey
Language:EN
Published: Florida Atlantic University 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10606329
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-106063292017-12-01T04:23:03Z Sedentism, Agriculture, and the Neolithic Demographic Transition| Insights from Jomon Paleodemography Noxon, Corey Archaeology|Asian history|Ancient history <p>A paleodemographic analysis was conducted using skeletal data from J?mon period sites in Japan. 15P5 ratios were produced as proxy birth rate values for sites throughout the J?mon period. Previous studies based on numbers of residential sites indicated a substantial population increase in the Kant? and Ch?bu regions in central Japan, climaxing during the Middle J?mon period, followed by an equally dramatic population decrease, somewhat resembling changes that occurred during a Neolithic Demographic Transition (NDT). The J?mon are viewed as a relatively sedentary, non-agricultural group, and provided an opportunity to attempt to separate the factors of sedentism and agriculture as they relate to the NDT. Skeletal data showed fairly stable trends in birth rates, instead of the expected increase and decrease in values. This discrepancy calls into question the validity of previous studies. The stable population levels suggest that sedentism alone was not the primary driver of the NDT. Florida Atlantic University 2017-11-30 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10606329 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Archaeology|Asian history|Ancient history
spellingShingle Archaeology|Asian history|Ancient history
Noxon, Corey
Sedentism, Agriculture, and the Neolithic Demographic Transition| Insights from Jomon Paleodemography
description <p>A paleodemographic analysis was conducted using skeletal data from J?mon period sites in Japan. 15P5 ratios were produced as proxy birth rate values for sites throughout the J?mon period. Previous studies based on numbers of residential sites indicated a substantial population increase in the Kant? and Ch?bu regions in central Japan, climaxing during the Middle J?mon period, followed by an equally dramatic population decrease, somewhat resembling changes that occurred during a Neolithic Demographic Transition (NDT). The J?mon are viewed as a relatively sedentary, non-agricultural group, and provided an opportunity to attempt to separate the factors of sedentism and agriculture as they relate to the NDT. Skeletal data showed fairly stable trends in birth rates, instead of the expected increase and decrease in values. This discrepancy calls into question the validity of previous studies. The stable population levels suggest that sedentism alone was not the primary driver of the NDT.
author Noxon, Corey
author_facet Noxon, Corey
author_sort Noxon, Corey
title Sedentism, Agriculture, and the Neolithic Demographic Transition| Insights from Jomon Paleodemography
title_short Sedentism, Agriculture, and the Neolithic Demographic Transition| Insights from Jomon Paleodemography
title_full Sedentism, Agriculture, and the Neolithic Demographic Transition| Insights from Jomon Paleodemography
title_fullStr Sedentism, Agriculture, and the Neolithic Demographic Transition| Insights from Jomon Paleodemography
title_full_unstemmed Sedentism, Agriculture, and the Neolithic Demographic Transition| Insights from Jomon Paleodemography
title_sort sedentism, agriculture, and the neolithic demographic transition| insights from jomon paleodemography
publisher Florida Atlantic University
publishDate 2017
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10606329
work_keys_str_mv AT noxoncorey sedentismagricultureandtheneolithicdemographictransitioninsightsfromjomonpaleodemography
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