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Seeking a Richer Harvest [electronic resource] : The Archaeology of Subsistence Intensification, Innovation, and Change / edited by Tina L. Thurston, Christopher T. Fisher.

Contributor(s): Series: Studies in Human Ecology and Adaptation ; 3Publisher: Boston, MA : Springer US, 2007Description: X, 274 p. online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780387327624
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Printed edition:: No titleDDC classification:
  • 301 23
LOC classification:
  • HM545
Online resources:
Contents:
Seeking a Richer Harvest -- Classic Period Agricultural Intensification and Domestic Life at el Palmillo, Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico -- The Wet or the Dry? -- Agricultural Intensification in the Lake Pátzcuaro Basin -- Chinampa Cultivation in the Basin of Mexico -- Agricultural Intensification in the Titicaca Basin -- Animal Intensification at Neolithic Gritille -- Infields, Outfields, and Broken Lands -- Cod Fish, Walrus, and Chieftains -- Intensification and Protohistoric Agropastoral Systems in East Africa -- Rethinking Intensification -- Intensification, Innovation, and Change.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: Subsistence intensification, innovation and change have long figured prominently in explanations for the development of social complexity among foragers and horticulturalists, and the rise of chiefly societies and archaic states, yet there is considerable debate over the actual mechanisms that promote these processes. Traditional approaches to the "intensification question" emphasize population pressure, climate change, bureaucratic management, or even land degradation as prerequisites for the onset of new or changing strategies, or the construction and maintenance of agricultural landscapes. Most often these factors are modeled as external forces outside the realm of human decision-making, but recent archaeological research presents an alternative to this suggesting that subsistence intensification is the result of human driven strategies for power, prestige and status stemming from internal conditions within a group. When responding to environmental adversity, human groups were less frequently the victims, as they have been repeatedly portrayed. Instead human groups were often vigorous actors, responding with resilience, ingenuity, and planning, to flourish or survive within dynamic and sometimes unpredictable social and natural milieux.
Item type: eBooks
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Seeking a Richer Harvest -- Classic Period Agricultural Intensification and Domestic Life at el Palmillo, Valley of Oaxaca, Mexico -- The Wet or the Dry? -- Agricultural Intensification in the Lake Pátzcuaro Basin -- Chinampa Cultivation in the Basin of Mexico -- Agricultural Intensification in the Titicaca Basin -- Animal Intensification at Neolithic Gritille -- Infields, Outfields, and Broken Lands -- Cod Fish, Walrus, and Chieftains -- Intensification and Protohistoric Agropastoral Systems in East Africa -- Rethinking Intensification -- Intensification, Innovation, and Change.

Subsistence intensification, innovation and change have long figured prominently in explanations for the development of social complexity among foragers and horticulturalists, and the rise of chiefly societies and archaic states, yet there is considerable debate over the actual mechanisms that promote these processes. Traditional approaches to the "intensification question" emphasize population pressure, climate change, bureaucratic management, or even land degradation as prerequisites for the onset of new or changing strategies, or the construction and maintenance of agricultural landscapes. Most often these factors are modeled as external forces outside the realm of human decision-making, but recent archaeological research presents an alternative to this suggesting that subsistence intensification is the result of human driven strategies for power, prestige and status stemming from internal conditions within a group. When responding to environmental adversity, human groups were less frequently the victims, as they have been repeatedly portrayed. Instead human groups were often vigorous actors, responding with resilience, ingenuity, and planning, to flourish or survive within dynamic and sometimes unpredictable social and natural milieux.

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