Hunters lived on Tibetan plateau thousands of years earlier than thought
Hunters lived on Tibetan plateau thousands of years earlier than thought
Genetic and archaeological evidence points to pre-agricultural residents of the 'roof of the world'.
Jane Qiu
05 January 2017
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Intrepid hunter-gatherers may have lived permanently in the cold, harsh environment of the oxygen-starved Tibetan Plateau at least 7,400 years ago nearly 4,000 years earlier than researchers had thought.
The claim, made by archaeologists who have re-examined ancient hand- and footprints at a site in central Tibet, could shed light on how and why humans moved to live at high altitudes. And it fits with genetic studies suggesting that Tibetan people began to acquire physiological adaptations to help them cope with reduced atmospheric oxygen levels around the same time. But some researchers say the evidence is too scanty to confirm such early year-round habitation on the plateau.
With an average elevation of 4.5 kilometres, the air on the Tibetan Plateau has around half the oxygen present at sea level. Its the ultimate test for human survival and adaptation in extreme environments, says Mark Aldenderfer, an archaeologist at the University of California in Merced, and a co-author of the new study, published on 5 January in Science1.
Scientists thought that people began to live there year-round both in summer and in bitter winter only about 3,600 years ago, when barley crops that can tolerate frost and cold temperatures were introduced, and farmers moved upland en masse2.
More:
http://www.nature.com/news/hunters-lived-on-tibetan-plateau-thousands-of-years-earlier-than-thought-1.21255