Introduction
Archaeological research in recent decades has significantly increased our knowledge of early human occupation of the eastern, southern and northern parts of the Tibetan Plateau (e.g. Hudson et al. Reference Hudson, Olsen and Quade2014; Madsen et al. Reference Madsen, Perreault, Rhode, Sun, Yi, Brunson and Brantingham2017; Meyer et al. Reference Meyer, Aldenderfer, Wang, Hoffmann, Dahl, Degering, Haas and Schlütz2017; Zhang et al. Reference Zhang2018; Zhang et al. Reference Zhang2020).
However, the settlement pattern and residential mobility of hunter-gatherers in Tibet during the Early Holocene remains underexplored. In Tibetan archaeology, the presumption is that early hunter-gatherers in extreme environments were socially simple; this, combined with the fact that their residential remains are ephemeral, has prevented further academic efforts to investigate the complexity of their settlement patterns and social behaviours. Here, we provide results from our research project that took place between 2019 and 2023 at the Xiada Co site in Western Tibet. This site yielded evidence for long-term occupation by hunter-gatherers, with several residential structures, and sheds new light on the lifeways of ancient high-elevation foragers (Figure 1).
Excavations and surveys at the Xiada Co site
With an elevation of 4360m above sea level, the Xiada Co site (33°23′34.17″N, 79°23′22.91″E) lies on the northern terrace of a freshwater lake, Lake Xiada Co, in Rutog County in the Tibet Autonomous Region, between the Gangtise range and the Karakoram range in Western Tibet. The Asian Westerly and Indian Summer Monsoon led to pronounced seasonal differences in this region, featuring a long, cold and dry winter and a rainy summer. The mountainous landscape in this region is now dominated by grassland and shrubs.
An archaeological survey in 1992 led by archaeologists from Sichuan University discovered several stone tools by Lake Xiada Co (Li et al. Reference Li, Huo and Gengdui1993). Further research on this stone assemblage drew attention to the possible existence of Acheulian handaxes in Western Tibet (Lü Reference Lü2011). In 2019, a joint archaeological team of Sichuan University and Institute of Cultural Relic Preservation of Tibet Autonomous Region discovered prehistoric cultural deposits at Xiada Co and conducted three excavations and surveys in 2020, 2022 and 2023 (Figure 2).
After the initial pedestrian survey and test excavation in 2019, the first archaeological excavation started in 2020 and we excavated a total area of 49m2. The most important finding in 2020 was a square sandy feature with a concentration of charcoal, stone artefacts, animal bones and burned stones (Figure 3a). We also discovered several ash piles and stone piles within and near this feature, which is approximately 4m × 4m. According to the spatial distribution of stone artefacts and animal bones, this feature is likely to be the campsite of ancient hunter-gatherers.
In the 2022 and 2023 field seasons, we moved the excavation area to the west of the site and launched a comprehensive archaeological survey of the lake terrace. With a total excavation area of 200m2, we discovered a profile consisting of three layers of black sand with stone artefacts (F2, F3 and L7; see Figure 4), indicating both long-term and discontinuous human occupation of this location. Those excavations revealed four similar features of black sandy patches containing rich deposits of ashes, several stone hearths, animal bones and stone artefacts. Two of the black sandy features, F2 and F3, were surrounded by several postholes (labelled with ZD; see Figure 3b). The postholes all have a depth of approximately 100–200mm and are superimposed by the black sandy cultural deposits. Two compacted living surfaces of greyish-white sand were found. One compacted surface (YM3) possibly served as an indoor facility or trampled floor and the other one (YM4) was outside the residential structures.
Thousands of stone artefacts were found on the ground surface of the entire northern terrace of Lake Xiada Co, indicating that this site might have been intensively occupied by ancient people. Our systematic survey in 2023 on the lake terrace employed shovel-test sampling and discovered six locations of cultural deposits on the lake terrace. Those locations are patchy and small, usually with an area of less than 100m2 each. We discovered one location on the north-eastern terrace with ceramics and bronzes, suggesting long-term human occupation of this site throughout the Holocene.
Artefacts and chronology
Excavations during three field seasons yielded over 20 000 stone artefacts and animal bones, which are still being documented and analysed. The assemblage of stone artefacts is dominated by core-flake items and microblades, some of which are made of obsidian. Of note, we discovered six ground stone needles, which represent the earliest ground stone tools found in Tibet (Figure 5).
Based on radiocarbon dates on charcoal and animal bone from layers L4 and L2 in the 2020 excavation trench, the earliest occupation of this site is dated to c. 9000–8500 BP. New radiocarbon dating results retrieved from the western part of the site date the residential structures to around 6000 BP (Table 1 & Figure 6).
Conclusion
The Xiada Co site presents a rare archaeological example of long-term, high-altitude occupation by early hunter-gatherers. Although our excavation grids during the project in 2022 and 2023 did not fully reveal the extent of the residential structures, the evidence indicates that at least two of them were constructed with postholes. This is the earliest evidence, to date, of human-built residential structures discovered in Tibet. We will investigate the spatial structure of this site in our future excavations. The systematic survey of the lake terrace and our results from the excavations suggest that this area was occupied from the early Holocene to Bronze Age. Long-term human settlement at Xiada Co suggests the continuity of human adaptative strategies and social behaviours in extreme environments, which possibly led to human aggregation on this lake terrace. Future work will focus on the excavations of the Bronze Age settlement at Xiada Co to explore the transition from hunting and gathering to food production in Western Tibet.
Acknowledgements
We thank researchers from the Institute of Cultural Relic Preservation of Tibet Autonomous Region, Sichuan University and Washington University in St Louis for their support during the excavations.
Funding statement
This research is supported by the National Social Science Fund of China (Grant No. 21@WTK002, to H. Lü).