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Unearthing Asia MTA
Archaeological Discoveries from the Neolithic to Early States
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Unearthing Asia *Unearthing Asia* provides a comprehensive archaeological survey of the continent’s transition from Neolithic foraging communities to the rise of complex early states. The text moves beyond traditional "cradle of civilization" narratives to reveal a multi-centric history of innovation across Southwest Asia, the Indus Valley, Central Asia, and East and Southeast Asia. By integrating advanced scientific dating methods, isotopic analysis, and remote sensing like LiDAR, the book demonstrates how diverse environments—from arid loess plateaus to tropical wetlands and nomadic steppes—shaped unique social trajectories, subsistence strategies, and technological breakthroughs.

The book traces the development of critical "technologies of power," including the independent domestication of various crops like millet and rice, the mastery of bronze and iron metallurgy, and the creation of administrative tools such as writing, seals, and standardized weights. Significant attention is given to the role of ritual and ideology, as seen in the monumental architecture of Göbekli Tepe, the jade industry of Liangzhu, and the startling bronze sculptures of Sanxingdui. These material remains reveal that social complexity often emerged through spiritual and communal organization rather than through military conquest or agricultural surplus alone.

A central theme of the work is the deep history of connectivity across the continent. Long-distance trade networks, such as the Silk Roads and maritime sea lanes, facilitated a multi-directional flow of goods, technologies, and faiths like Buddhism. The text highlights how nomadic pastoralists of the steppe were as vital to these networks as the sedentary urbanites of the Indus or the Yangtze. By focusing on material culture, the book gives voice to the "silent majority" of craft specialists and farmers, providing a democratic view of history that challenges elite-focused textual records.

Ultimately, *Unearthing Asia* emphasizes the importance of archaeological ethics and community stewardship in preserving a finite and fragile record. It argues that the origins of Asian states were not a linear march toward a fixed endpoint but a "braided river" of diverse, overlapping experiments in human organization. By rethinking these origins through a material lens, the book reveals a past characterized by profound regional diversity and resilient adaptation, offering a more nuanced understanding of the historical foundations of modern Asian identities.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Asia’s early societies followed diverse, regionally specific pathways to farming, herding, and state formation rather than a single 'Neolithic revolution'.
  • The book details how radiocarbon, luminescence, and isotopic dating methods create precise chronologies that link environmental shifts to cultural innovation across the continent.
  • Excavation ethics are foregrounded, stressing community collaboration, heritage stewardship, and anti‑looting practices as essential to responsible archaeology in Asia.
  • Chapters trace the emergence of early urban centers and states—from the Indus Valley’s hydraulic cities and standardized weights to China’s Erlitou‑Shang bronze metallurgy and Southeast Asian maritime polities.
  • Technologies of power such as writing, seals, standardized weights, and early money were independently developed and used to administer resources, legitimize authority, and enable long‑distance exchange.
Who's It For:

This book is ideal for undergraduate and graduate students in archaeology, anthropology, history, and Asian studies who seek a rigorous, up‑to‑date synthesis of Asia’s deep past. It also serves general readers interested in the origins of early states, methodological advances in dating, and the ethical dimensions of heritage work. Scholars looking for comparative perspectives on domestication, urbanism, and technological innovation across the continent will find it a valuable reference.

Author:

Christine Gardner

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 18, 2026

Word Count:

69,055 words

Reading Time:

4 hours 50 minutes

Sample:

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