Upper East Asia (28,577–7,822 BCE):  …

Years: 28577BCE - 7822BCE

Upper East Asia (28,577–7,822 BCE): Deglaciation, Pluvial Basins, and Highland Refugia

Geographic and Environmental Context

Upper East Asia includes Mongolia, Tibet, and the western highlands of China (Xinjiang, Qinghai, Gansu, Ningxia, NW Sichuan).

Anchors: Altai–Gobi margins, Ordos–Loess Loop, Tarim–Junggar basins, Qinghai–Tibet Plateau (Amdo, Kham), Qilian–Kunlun–Tianshan ranges, Hexi Corridor.

  • Retreat of glaciers in Altai, Qilian, Kunlun; meltwater swelled Tarim, Junggar, Qinghai pluvial lakes.

  • Bølling–Allerød humid surge expanded grass–steppe; Younger Dryas reversed to aridity.

  • Early Holocene warmth and monsoon rebound re-greened basins and plateau margins.

Subsistence & Settlement

  • Foragers occupied lake shores (fish, waterfowl, reed tubers) and steppe fringes (gazelle, wild equids).

  • Plateau refugia provided yak–antelope hunting, marmots, and root-gathering.

  • Rock shelters along Qilian–Kunlun escarpments anchored seasonal camps.

Technology

  • Blade–microblade traditions; bone harpoons; early grindstones.

  • Hide/felt clothing; fire-hearths for winter.

Movement Corridors

  • Hexi Corridor linked Loess to basins.

  • Altai–Dzungar gates opened to Siberia.

  • Koko Nor/Qinghai Lake shores as gathering nodes.

Symbolism

  • Red ochre in burials; stone alignments on ridges; incised bone motifs.

Adaptation

  • Seasonal alternation: pluvial lakes in warm pulses, highland refuges in cold/dry phases.

Transition
By 7,822 BCE, mixed lacustrine–highland strategies underpinned survival, priming pastoral potentials.

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