Fahien reconsidered: Pleistocene exploitation of wild bananas and Holocene introduction of Musa cultivars to Sri Lanka
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Langhe, Edmond
Vrydaghs, Luc
Perrier, Xavier
Denham, Tim
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Wiley
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A recent publication on the phytolith assemblage at Fahien rockshelter, Sri Lanka (Premathilake andHunt) is argued to represent: the exploitation of wildMusa acuminataandM. balbisianaduring the Late Pleistocene;the introduction of edible diploid cultivars from the Southeast Asia–New Guinea region during the early to mid‐Holocene; the generation and cultivation of triploid banana hybrids on Sri Lanka before 6194–5994 calBP; and thesubsequent spread of derived triploid cultivars to mainland India and westward to Africa. A careful review of thearchaeobotanical research presented by Premathilake and Hunt, in the context of broader multidisciplinary evidence(agronomy, archaeobotany, genetics and linguistics) for the domestication and spread of banana cultivars, indicatesthat three main aspects of their argument are problematic: the lack of clarity in the characterization of bananadomestication in the past; the methods used to discriminate phytoliths into banana taxa; and the promotion ofSri Lanka as a source region rather than a recipient of banana cultivars. Following reconsideration, the Fahienevidence is consistent with previous interpretations for the origins of diploid and significant triploid cultivars outsideof Sri Lanka and dispersal to that island
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Journal of Quaternary Science
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