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Portrait reconstruction of BAJ022
Ancient Individual

A man buried in Jordan in the Neolithic era

BAJ022
7250 BCE - 6800 BCE
Male
Pre-Pottery Neolithic B of Baja
Jordan
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Chapter I

Identity

The biological and cultural markers that define this ancient individual

Sample ID

BAJ022

Date Range

7250 BCE - 6800 BCE

Biological Sex

Male

mtDNA Haplogroup

N1a1a

Y-DNA Haplogroup

E-M84

Cultural Period

Pre-Pottery Neolithic B of Baja

Chapter II

Place

Where this individual was discovered

Country Jordan
Locality Ba’ja (Ma'an, Wadi Musa)
Coordinates 30.4153, 35.4625
Chapter III

Time

When this individual lived in the broader context of human history

BAJ022 7250 BCE - 6800 BCE
Chapter IV

Story

The narrative of this ancient life

The Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB) period, which typically ranges from around 8,800 to 6,500 BCE in the Near East, represents a transformation in the early agricultural communities. While this specific period mainly pertains to the Levant and parts of the Near East, adapting it to a hypothetical PPNB-like culture in Baja California with an \Early Agricultural" phase requires some imaginative reconstruction based on regional environmental and cultural characteristics.

Hypothetical Description of Pre-Pottery Neolithic B of Baja - Early Agricultural Phase

Environmental Context:

Baja California, with its unique desert and coastal ecosystems, would furnish an interesting backdrop for early agricultural development. The region, characterized by arid landscapes, seasonal rivers, and a lengthy coastline, would exert a significant influence on the subsistence strategies of its inhabitants.

Agricultural Practices:

In this hypothetical scenario, the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B culture in Baja would engage in early forms of agriculture tailored to its arid conditions. This might involve:

  • Crop Cultivation: Introduction of drought-resistant crops such as agave, squash, maize adapted to the arid conditions, and native plants possibly domesticated for their hardiness.
  • Irrigation Techniques: Development of basic irrigation methods to conserve water, essential given the scarcity of consistent rainfall. This might include rudimentary damming and canal systems.
  • Horticulture: Cultivating smaller garden plots near settlements for edible plants and herbs.

Social and Settlement Patterns:

Settlements would likely be situated near reliable water sources such as oases or seasonally-flowing streams. They might be semi-permanent, with the following characteristics:

  • House Structures: Construction of dwellings using locally available materials such as adobe mud, stone, and wood from desert bushes.
  • Community Organization: Small communal groups engaging in cooperative building and farming activities, possibly organized around extended family units.

Technology and Tools:

The technological artifacts of this culture would reflect the transition from hunter-gatherer to more sedentary agricultural life:

  • Stone Tools: Continued use of flaked stone tools, but with increasing sophistication in design, including sickles and grinding stones for processing plant materials.
  • Bone and Shell Implements: Use of animal bones and seashells for decorative and practical items such as needles, fishhooks, and ornaments.

Subsistence Strategies:

Aside from agriculture, the inhabitants would continue to rely on traditional hunting and gathering:

  • Diet: A diet likely comprising cultivated crops supplemented with gathered plants, hunted game (such as rabbits, deer), and marine resources including fish and shellfish.
  • Animal Domestication: Early domestication of animals like dogs for hunting and protective purposes, and possibly small livestock adapted to the arid climate.

Cultural and Spiritual Life:

The spiritual and cultural dimension of this hypothetical culture may reflect emerging complexities:

  • Art and Symbols: Development of art forms and symbols possibly seen in petroglyphs or engravings indicative of their spiritual beliefs or social structures.
  • Ritual Practices: Communal gatherings for rituals related to agricultural cycles, possibly marked by dance, music, and the use of sacred spaces within the settlement or the surrounding natural environment.

Challenges and Adaptations:

Faced with environmental challenges, this early agricultural society would be adapting to:

  • Climate Variability: Strategies to cope with drought conditions and variability in climate, possibly influencing migration patterns or cultural adaptations.
  • Resource Management: Developing a deeper model of resource management to sustain their settlements, including communal storage of surplus products and shared resource use.

This exercise requires speculation, as there is no direct evidence of a Pre-Pottery Neolithic B culture in Baja California specifically. However, by extrapolating characteristics from known PPNB cultures in the Near East and adapting them to the Baja California environment, we can create a plausible and engaging narrative about an early agricultural phase in this region."

Chapter V

Context

Other ancient individuals connected to this sample

Sources

References

Scientific publications and genetic data

Scientific Publication

Isotopic and DNA analyses reveal multiscale PPNB mobility and migration across Southeastern Anatolia and the Southern Levant

Authors Wang X, Skourtanioti E, Benz M
Abstract

Growing reliance on animal and plant domestication in the Near East and beyond during the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B (PPNB) (the ninth to eighth millennium BC) has often been associated with a "revolutionary" social transformation from mobility toward more sedentary lifestyles. We are able to yield nuanced insights into the process of the Neolithization in the Near East based on a bioarchaeological approach integrating isotopic and archaeogenetic analyses on the bone remains recovered from Nevalı Çori, a site occupied from the early PPNB in Turkey where some of the earliest evidence of animal and plant domestication emerged, and from Ba'ja, a typical late PPNB site in Jordan. In addition, we present the archaeological sequence of Nevalı Çori together with newly generated radiocarbon dates. Our results are based on strontium (87Sr/86Sr), carbon, and oxygen (δ18O and δ13Ccarb) isotopic analyses conducted on 28 human and 29 animal individuals from the site of Nevalı Çori. 87Sr/86Sr results indicate mobility and connection with the contemporaneous surrounding sites during the earlier PPNB prior to an apparent decline in this mobility at a time of growing reliance on domesticates. Genome-wide data from six human individuals from Nevalı Çori and Ba'ja demonstrate a diverse gene pool at Nevalı Çori that supports connectedness within the Fertile Crescent during the earlier phases of Neolithization and evidence of consanguineous union in the PPNB Ba'ja and the Iron Age Nevalı Çori.

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