Paleoproteomic evidence reveals dairying supported prehistoric occupation of the highland Tibetan Plateau

Authors

TANG Li WILKIN Shevan RICHTER Kristine Korzow BLEASDALE Madeleine NEVES FERNANDES Luis Ricardo HE Yuanhong LI Shuai PETRAGLIA Michael SCOTT Ashley TEOH Fallen K. Y. TONG Yan TSERING Tinlei TSHO Yang YANG Feng YUAN Haibing CHEN Zujun ROBERTS Patrick HE Wei SPENGLER Robert LU Hongliang WANGDUE Shargan BOIVIN Nicole

Year of publication 2023
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source SCIENCE ADVANCES
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Arts

Citation
Web https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/sciadv.adf0345
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.adf0345
Keywords High-Altitude; Agriculture; Adaptation; Identification; Pleistocene; Product; Cattle; Milk; East; Site
Description The extreme environments of the Tibetan Plateau offer considerable challenges to human survival, demanding novel adaptations. While the role of biological and agricultural adaptations in enabling early human colonization of the plateau has been widely discussed, the contribution of pastoralism is less well understood, especially the dairy pastoralism that has historically been central to Tibetan diets. Here, we analyze ancient proteins from the dental calculus (n = 40) of all human individuals with sufficient calculus preservation from the interior plateau. Our paleoproteomic results demonstrate that dairy pastoralism began on the highland plateau by ~3500 years ago. Patterns of milk protein recovery point to the importance of dairy for individuals who lived in agriculturally poor regions above 3700 m above sea level. Our study suggests that dairy was a critical cultural adaptation that supported expansion of early pastoralists into the region’s vast, non-arable highlands, opening the Tibetan Plateau up to widespread, permanent human occupation.

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