| Literature DB >> 29997411 |
Patrick Roberts1,2, Thomas H Gillingwater3, Marta Mirazon Lahr4, Julia Lee-Thorp2, Malcolm MacCallum3, Michael Petraglia1, Oshan Wedage1,5, Uruwaruge Heenbanda6, Uruwaruge Wainnya-Laeto6.
Abstract
Headland and Bailey (1991) argued in Human Ecology that tropical forests could not support long-term human foraging in the absence of agriculture. Part of their thesis was based on the fact that supposedly isolated 'forest' foragers, such as the Wanniyalaeto (or Vedda) peoples of Sri Lanka, could be demonstrated to be enmeshed within historical trade networks and rely on crops as part of their overall subsistence. Yet, in the same volume and in the years that followed scholars have presented ethnographic and archaeological evidence, including from Sri Lanka, that counter this proposition, demonstrating the occupation and exploitation of tropical rainforest environments back to 38,000 years ago (ka) in this part of the world. However, archaeological and ethnohistorical research has yet to quantify the overall reliance of human foragers on tropical forest resources through time. Here, we report stable carbon and oxygen isotope data from historical Wanniyalaeto individuals from Sri Lanka, in full collaboration with the present-day members of this group, that suggest that while a number of individuals made use of agricultural resources in the recent past, others subsisted primarily on tropical forest resources as late as the 1800s.Entities:
Keywords: Hunter-gatherers; Indigenous peoples; Sri Lanka; Stable light isotopes; The Wanniyalaeto; Tropical rainforest
Year: 2018 PMID: 29997411 PMCID: PMC6015624 DOI: 10.1007/s10745-018-9997-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Ecol Interdiscip J ISSN: 0300-7839
Fig. 1Map showing the vegetation zones of Sri Lanka after Erdelen (1988) and Roberts et al. (2015a)
Stable carbon and oxygen isotope ratios of historical Wanniyalaeto (“Vedda”) individuals analyzed in this study
| Sample | Group | Accession number | Tooth | Source | Sex | δ13C (‰) | δ18O (‰) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VED1 | “Vedda” | XXI.H.2 | Lower left M3 | Edinburgh | Male | −10.9 | −4.8 |
| VED2 | “Vedda” | XXI.H.4 | Lower left M3 | Edinburgh | Male | −6.0 | −5.1 |
| VED3 | “Vedda” | XXI.H.6 | Upper left M2 | Edinburgh | Male | −13.6 | −5.8 |
| VED4 | “Vedda” | XXI.H.8 | Upper right M2 | Edinburgh | Male | −12.7 | −2.9 |
| VED5 | “Vedda” | XXI.H.1 | Lower right M3 | Edinburgh | Male | −5.5 | −4.2 |
| VED6 | “Vedda” | XXI.H.3 | Lower left M3 | Edinburgh | Male | −7.3 | −7.3 |
| VED7 | “Vedda” | XXI.H.5 | Upper left M1 | Edinburgh | Male | −5.2 | −5.4 |
| VED8 | “Vedda” | XXI.H.7 | Upper left PM2 | Edinburgh | Female | −14.1 | −6.1 |
| VED9 | “Vedda” | XXI.G.18 | Lower right M3 | Edinburgh | Male | −14.2 | −5.2 |
| VED10 | “Vedda” | AS.54.01 | Lower left M2 | Cambridge | Male | −9.3 | −4.1 |
| VED11 | “Vedda” | 6101 | Lower left M2 | Cambridge | Male | −10.0 | −6.2 |
| VED12 | “Vedda” | 6100 | Lower left M2 | Cambridge | Male | −6.8 | −4.6 |
| VED13 | “Vedda” | 1197 | Upper right M1 | Cambridge | - | −11.1 | −4.3 |
| VED14 | “Vedda” | 1196 | Upper right M2 | Cambridge | - | −12.0 | −4.8 |
All samples come from historical collections at the Duckworth Laboratory, University of Cambridge, and the Department of Anatomy, University of Edinburgh
Fig. 2δ13C and δ18O measurements of Wanniyalaeto (“Vedda”) individuals analysed in this study. Dashed lines delineate estimated tooth enamel δ13C for individuals living under a dense “canopy”, individuals consuming 100% C3 resources, and individuals consuming 100% C4 resources from the literature (Lee-Thorp et al. 1989a, b; Levin et al. 2008; Roberts et al. 2015a, 2017)
Fig. 3δ13C measurements of individuals from the Wanniyalaeto (“Vedda”) individuals analysed in this study as well as prehistoric human samples from Terminal Pleistocene/Holocene (Roberts et al. 2015a, 2017) (c. 12–3 ka) and Late Pleistocene (c. 36–13 ka) (Roberts et al. 2017) Sri Lanka, and Pre-Neolithic and Neolithic/Early Metal Age individuals from Sarawak, Borneo (Krigbaum 2003, 2005). The divisions for individuals living under a dense “canopy”, individuals consuming 100% C3 resources, and individuals consuming 100% C4 resources from the literature are again shown with dashed lines
Fig. 4δ18O measurements of individuals from the Wanniyalaeto (“Vedda”) individuals analysed in this study as well as prehistoric human samples from Terminal Pleistocene/Holocene (Roberts et al. 2015a, 2017) (c. 12–3 ka) and Late Pleistocene (c. 36–13 ka) (Roberts et al. 2017) Sri Lanka, and Pre-Neolithic and Neolithic/Early Metal Age individuals from Sarawak, Borneo (Krigbaum 2003, 2005)