Trade, transportation, and tributaries :  exchange, agriculture, and settlement distribution in early historic period Kedah, Malaysia. 的封面图片
Trade, transportation, and tributaries : exchange, agriculture, and settlement distribution in early historic period Kedah, Malaysia.
題名:
Trade, transportation, and tributaries : exchange, agriculture, and settlement distribution in early historic period Kedah, Malaysia.
作者:
Allen, S. Jane.
主要作者:
出版資訊:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 1988
稽核項:
1 online resource (842 p.)
一般附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 51-12, Section: A.
Publisher info.: Dissertation/Thesis.
Advisor: Sloheim, Wilhelm G., II.
摘要:
Geoarcheological survey conducted in 1979-1980 mapped and described 87 historic-period sites in Kedah, Peninsular Malaysia. The sites include Indian-style shrines long invoked as proof of Indian domination but which actually appear to have played very peripheral roles in a Malay-controlled extraregional exchange system, which grew out of internal exchange; by the 8th Century, the first of three Kedah entrepots controlled trade with China, India, and the Middle East. A major populational shift appears to have followed the blocking of a major estuary with silts. Marked erosion upslope, probably beginning centuries earlier, produced coastal progradation throughout the area, eventually creating a vast coastal floodplain, where irrigated rice is grown today. Site locations in this dramatically-changing landscape were investigated through analyses of sediments, soils, landforms, and biotic communities. Three hypotheses were tested: (1) that the populational shift followed the infilling of the old estuary; (2) that trade sites remained closely correlated with major river drainages; and (3) that the early historic-period subsistence base was dryland agriculture. A radiocarbon date from the oldest of seven burn horizons examined in an upslope soil profile suggests that erosion here, with redeposition in the old estuary below, was well underway by A.D. 610-1020, with repeated cycles of dryland agriculture hastening the process. Tradeware finds suggest that the populational shift took place c. A.D. 1200-1250 in order to utilize a still-patent river route for trade. Every site is located beside or overlooking a current or relict waterway with access to areas rich in forest products. Massive erosion throughout the Peninsula suggests that bush/short-fallow dryland cereal agriculture supported the Malay exchange-based system until hillslope soils were exhausted. Evidence for landscape change throughout coastal Malaya is considered in the concluding chapter in an attempt to locate, by applying the geoarcheological evidence, several elusive trade-related placenames recorded by the earliest Western visitors to describe the Peninsula.
本地注釋:
School code: 0085.
網址連結:
Click for full text
團體輔助作者:
學位論文註:
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Hawai'i at Manoa, 1988.
登入號(微縮資料號):
npmlib ysh
預約: 複本總數: