From Nihewan to Zhoukoudian: Cultural Evolution Pattern in the Paleolithic Age of Northern China

LI Jun , SHI Xiaorun

Front. Hist. China ›› 2022, Vol. 17 ›› Issue (2) : 172 -197.

PDF (689KB)
Front. Hist. China ›› 2022, Vol. 17 ›› Issue (2) : 172 -197. DOI: 10.3868/s020-011-022-0007-7
SPECIAL ISSUE ARTICLE
SPECIAL ISSUE ARTICLE

From Nihewan to Zhoukoudian: Cultural Evolution Pattern in the Paleolithic Age of Northern China

Author information +
History +
PDF (689KB)

Abstract

Nihewan and Zhoukoudian are important areas where early humans and cultures originated and reproduced in northern China and even East Asia. Geologically, both site groups belong to the Haihe River valley; chronologically, the Nihewan sites date to ca. 1.7 million years ago, and the Zhoukoudian sites date to ca. 0.5 million years ago; and culturally, both are dominated by the small-flake-tool culture. Thus, it is speculated that the early culture in the Zhoukoudian sites came from the migrants from the Nihewan Basin who facilitated cultural diffusion in the area; in turn, it also affected the culture in the Nihewan area during the subsequent development. This paper proposes the development path of the Paleolithic culture in northern China, that is, early humans in this region roughly experienced three stages of subsistence from lake-dependent to cave-dependent and then to river-dependent.

Keywords

Nihewan Basin, Zhoukoudian area, cultural relation, environment,taphonomic pattern

Cite this article

Download citation ▾
LI Jun, SHI Xiaorun. From Nihewan to Zhoukoudian: Cultural Evolution Pattern in the Paleolithic Age of Northern China. Front. Hist. China, 2022, 17(2): 172-197 DOI:10.3868/s020-011-022-0007-7

登录浏览全文

4963

注册一个新账户 忘记密码

References

RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS

Higher Education Press

AI Summary AI Mindmap
PDF (689KB)

493

Accesses

0

Citation

Detail

Sections
Recommended

AI思维导图

/