Archaeology 100-D200

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Archaeology 100-D200

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Archaeology 100-D200 Ancient Peoples and Places Archaeology and the Study of Prehistory Week 6: THE NEOLITHIC: NEAR EAST, THE AMERICAS AND THE WORLD. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Archaeology 100-D200


1
Archaeology 100-D200 Ancient Peoples and
Places Archaeology and the Study of
Prehistory Week 6 THE NEOLITHIC NEAR EAST,
THE AMERICAS AND THE WORLD. INCREASING SOCIAL
COMPLEXITY WITH DOMESTICATION February 20th
22nd 2012 Dr. Alvaro HiguerasSimon Fraser
University, Spring 2012
2
  • Agenda of Week 6
  • The Middle East and the Neolithic
  • Early agriculture in other parts of the world
  • Political structures and increasing complexity
    in human organization.

3
Those 15 points for Session 4 5 A. Population
of the Americas. B. The Magdalenian on the way
to the Mesolithic. C. "Sampling and sampling.
D. The sequence of political evolution. E.
Differences between Chiefdom and State? F.
"Qualitative" aspects of the political forms. G.
What are empires for? H. The most variable stage
in the evolution?
4
I. Redistribution and its evolution. J.
Decline, small vs. large scale societies. K. The
Mesolithic and the environment. L. What is there
to love about the Magdalenian? M. Megafauna and
the evidence. N. Symbiosis of humans and animals
towards domestication. O. The most important
factor in the formation and consolidation of
state-level societies?
5
Chiefdoms Redistribution in simple
chiefdoms Other mechanisms in more complex
ones without R gt Accumulation (then
gifts) Concentration of power and goods, used
of them in strategic ways Chiefdom as a
non-existent or short stage in some areas Or
archaeologists have not been able to document it
in the archaeological record of some regions
6
State gt Cooperation and good teamwork, as a
cluster of chiefdoms gt Sustainable resources,
dense population, and (further) evolution of a
hierarchy gt Physical environment where it
controls the activities aspect of social
organization such as farming, irrigation,
buildings gt Resolution of Conflict/competition
in densely populated societies is the factor, as
the state is thereon needed for conflict
resolution and management of the land.
7
  • The center of it all The Fertile Crescent
  • It is an area of Mediterranean climate
    characterized by dry summers and winter rains
    with enough precipitation to support vegetation
    ranging from woodlands to open park woodland
  • South and east of the Fertile Crescent, the open
    park woodlands give way to steppes and true
    deserts
  • It environment today is much drier that at the
    onset of the domestication process

8
Historical context for the development of
agriculture gt Spatial continuity formation of
mounds
Jericho
Çatalhöyük
9
  • Kebaran and Geometric Kebaran
  • These sites identified by characteristic stone
    tools bladelets
  • Most sites are remains of small camps made by
    highly mobile hunter-gatherers
  • Burials at these sites are rare
  • No evidence of plant or animal domestication
    during this period
  • Plant remains recovered include wild grasses,
    fruits, nuts, and animals

10
The Natufian Sedentary hunter-gatherers
foraging for food such as emmer wheat, barley and
almonds, and hunting gazelle, deer, cattle,
horse, and wild boar. For at least part of the
year, Natufian people lived in communities, some
quite large, of semi-subterranean houses. These
semi-circular one room structures were excavated
partly into the soil and built of stone, wood and
perhaps brush roofs.
11
(No Transcript)
12
They located their settlements at the boundaries
between coastal plains and hill country, to
maximize their access to a wide variety of food.
They buried their dead in cemeteries, with
grave goods including stone bowls and dentalium
shell. The largest Natufian communities (called
base camps) found to date include Jericho, Ain
Mallaha, and Wadi Hammeh 27. Smaller,
short-range dry season foraging camps may have
been part of the settlement pattern, although
evidence for them is scarce.
13
  • The Natufian tools
  • Characteristic stone tool is the lunate, a
    crescent-shaped bladelet served as hunting tools
    or as parts of tools made of multiple small
    pieces

Michael Chazan
14
  • Natufian settlements
  • People began the transition to village life
    during this period
  • Structures are ovals or open semicircles
  • Structures consist of undressed stones piled to
    form walls up to 1 metre high
  • Structure floors covered with refuseincluding
    stone tools and animal bones
  • The stone walls are thought to have supported
    superstructures made of wood and brush
  • Not clear what function structures served

15
  • Natufian burials
  • Burials are commonly found on Natufian sites
  • In some cases, the skull has been removed prior
    to burial
  • Some Natufian burials include shell necklaces and
    head coverings

16
  • Natufian subsistence
  • Natufians practised a broad-spectrum subsistence
    strategy
  • They exploited a wide range of wild plants
  • Most plant species do not show any evidence of
    having been domesticated
  • Hunting focused on a single species, gazelle
  • No herd animals were domesticated
  • Burials indicate that dogs were part of human
    society and being domesticated

17
  • The Early Neolithic
  • Early Neolithic is divided into two major
    periods
  • Pre-Pottery Neolithic A
  • Dates between 12,000-10,800 years ago
  • Corresponds to end of the Younger Dryas
  • The Big Freeze, was a geologically brief (1300
    70 years) cold climate period between
    approximately 12800
  • Pre-Pottery Neolithic B
  • Dates between 10,800-8,500 years ago
  • Corresponds to a period of improved climate

18
  • The Early Neolithic technology
  • A shift away from tools made on
  • bladelets
  • This periods toolkit is made on
    blades with an emphasis on
    arrowheads
  • Toolkit includes sickles,
    ground stone axes,
    and adzes
  • Grinding stones for processing grains found in
    extremely large quantities
  • Pre-Pottery B sites exhibit highly developed use
    of plaster

19
  • Pre-pottery A Neolithic
  • Settlement size increased during this period
  • First evidence of communal structures appears
  • Most impressive of these structures is Jericho
    tower9 m high, made of undressed stone and mud
    brick, attached to the inside of a massive wall
  • Houses continue to be circular, but settlements
    larger than Natufian ones

20
  • Pre-pottery B Neolithic
  • Round houses give way to rectangular ones
  • Settlement size increases significantly
  • Rectangular houses allow sites to be more densely
    packed than previously
  • Villages often show high degree of planning
  • No sense that the regular layout of the sites
    reflects presence of centralized authority

21
  • Early Neolithic Ritual
  • Many ritual objects were hiddenin pits, under
    floors, in cavestheir functions are unknown
  • Most striking hidden objects are plastered skulls
  • Human skulls on which plaster faces have been
    molded
  • Plaster figures have been found in pits
  • A cache of ritual objects were found in a cave
  • includes a cap, a bag, beads, bone tools,
    arrowheads, a painted stone mask, and a human
    skull with a net pattern on the cranium

22
Chinchorro burial, Northern Chile
Plastered Skull, Jericho
23
  • Early Neolithic Domestication
  • Earliest evidence of plant domestication is seen
    in contexts from the Pre-Pottery A
  • Farming developed during the Pre-Pottery
    Neolithic B period
  • A wide range of domesticated crops is found
    including
  • Cerealsemmer wheat, einkorn wheat, barley
  • Pulseslentils, peas
  • Legumesbitter vetch, chick peas

24
  • The Late Neolithic
  • Characterized by the development of pottery
    manufacture
  • Stone tools, expedient tools, made on local
    materials with minimal energy investment
  • Characterized by a limited number of large sites
    and small dispersed
    hamlets
  • Large sites are not
    densely packed
  • Symbolic artifacts
    tend to be stylized
    animal figurines

25
  • Late Neolithic subsistence
  • Importance of hunting continuously declines
    throughout period
  • Evidence for animal domestication includes
    changes in the shape of goat horns
  • Despite symbolic emphasis on bulls, main source
    of meat was domestic goat
  • People still relied on the full range of plants
    domesticated in the Early Neolithic

26
  • Tabaqat el-Buma
  • Directed by University of Toronto
  • archaeology professor Ted Banning
  • Part of the Wadi Ziqlab Project survey of this
    area of Northern Jordan
  • Late Neolithic site
  • Characterized by a number of dwellings that make
    up a small community
  • Banning suggests that these small, dispersed
    communities may have replaced the larger
    nucleated villages of the Early Neolithic

27
  • The cereals used at the Natufian site of
    Mureybet... may not have been growing locally
    but... may have been imported or introduced
    from farther north... Transport of raw materials
    across considerable distances is well known in
    the Near East, adding weight to the argument that
    cereals were also transported (Willcox 2005,
    539).
  • We need not imagine this to be the result of an
    institutionalized market in cereal futures
    (Bernstein 1996) in order to ask whether
    microeconomic tools will help us to understand
    how differential valuation in zones of production
    and consumption, balanced against the transaction
    costs associated with such movements of goods,
    rights, and/or consumers, will further analysis
    and explanation.

28
  • Willcoxs The distribution, natural habitats
    and availability of wild cereals in relation to
    their domestication in the Near East multiple
    events, multiple centres
  • (pattern shown as well at a world scale plants
    micro adapted to initial environmental features)
  • The proximity of a perennial water source was the
    main priority when choosing a settlement
    location, not the proximity of wild cereal
    stands. Settlement sites are all situated near a
    river, spring or lake... Due to the patchy
    distribution of the two wild wheat species, many
    sites were situated at some distance from the
    wild stands.

29
  • The change from gathering to cultivation was a
    gradual process. Hillman suggests that it had
    already started on a small scale in the Natufian,
    and a knowledge of planting may go back even
    farther Mesolithic broad spectrum experiences
  • During the initial stages early farmers may have
    been obliged to frequently replenish their seed
    stocks from wild stands, which would slow the
    domestication process. It is not until the end of
    the 9th millennium BC that we see the appearance
    of well established farmers with fully-fledged
    agriculture which produced conditions favourable
    for the selection of domestic traits

30
  • Microeconomic models for framing the question of
    agricultural origins in terms of risk,
    discounting, economies of scale, and transaction
    costs.
  • Rather than a functional approach productive
    environment or inequality function to facilitate
    this transformation?
  • Causal approach climate change, population
    growth, or feasting.
  • Behavioral ecology economic concepts are
    applicable whatever the mode of production

31
  • Politics and Borders in Archaeology
  • Politics and archaeology frequently intersect in
    the Middle East
  • Archaeology has been an important tool for change
    in places such as Israel, Palestine, Jordan, and
    Syria
  • However, Steven Rosen has shown that national
    borders have had a major influence on the
    reconstruction of the prehistory of the region

32
  • Problem
  • Modern borders affect the limits of where
    archaeologists work or visit
  • Israeli and Syrian archaeologists are unable to
    cross borders and visit each others countries
    for intellectual exchange
  • Results
  • Lack of communication and fragmentation of the
    archaeological record
  • Distorts our view of the past

33
  • Progress
  • gt Signing of a peace agreement between Israel and
    Jordan has eased travel between these two
    countries
  • gt Outbreaks of violence keeps travel to a minimum
  • gt But ease in travel has improved understanding
    of the connections between Israel and Jordan in
    prehistory
  • gt Emphasis on understanding local archaeological
    developments from a global perspective is a
    useful counterbalance to tendencies to use
    archaeology to promote nationalist agendas

34
  • Domesticates in Europe
  • Origins of domesticated plants and animals can
    be traced to the
    Middle East, the wave
  • No evidence of indigenous domestication of plants
    or animals
  • Unresolved questions about domestication in
    Europe include
  • gt Did populations of farmers sweep across Europe
    bringing new crops and new lifeways with them
  • gt Did Mesolithic hunter-gatherers adopt
    domesticated plants and animals to forge a new
    way of life?

35
Sheep and goat, as well as some cereals (emmer
wheat and einkorn) and pulses (lentil, pea, chick
pea, and bitter vetch) had no wild ancestors in
Europe during the Holocene.
36
A Feast of Diversity
37
  • Domestication in Africa
  • There are 3 major regions where plants were
    indigenously domesticated in Africa
  • 1. Northeast Africatef, finger millet, and
    coffee
  • 2. Central Africapearl millet, sorghum
  • 3. West AfricaAfrican rice
  • Domesticated plants introduced from the Middle
    East include wheat, barley, lentils
  • Domesticated animals introduced from the Middle
    East were sheep and goats
  • Considerable debate surrounds the origin of
    domesticated cattle in Africa

38
  • The Sahara desert
  • Today the Sahara desert is the most dominant
    feature of the North African landscape
  • The current desert environment developed in the
    Sahara only within the last 4000-5000 years
  • Between 14,000 and 4500 years ago there
    was considerably
    more rainfall in the Sahara
  • Extensive human occupation of the region
    was possible before
    it became a desert

39
  • Hunter-gatherers villages
  • Small villages of hunter-gatherers existed across
    northern Africa during the period of increased
    rainfall in the Sahara
  • Such sites resemble Natufian sites in the Middle
    East in several ways
  • Their size, the nature of the structures on them,
    the exploitation of a wide range of resources,
    the use of grinding stones
  • African also differ from Natufian sites in
    significant ways
  • Pottery and large numbers of storage pits are
    commonly found on African sitesnot in Natufian
    period

40
  • African pastoralists
  • Domesticated animals were introduced before
    domesticated plants in much of North Africa
  • Cattle, sheep, and
    goats appear to have
    been incorporated into
    mobile
    hunter-gatherer
    societies
  • Mobile societies with
    economies focused on
    maintaining herds of domesticated
    animals are called pastoral societies

41
  • Agriculture in New Guinea
  • Today, agricultural societies of New Guinea
    emphasize the centrality of pigs and sweet
    potatoes for subsistence and for developing a
    social hierarchy
  • The exchange of pigs is an essential element of
    political power
  • Sweet potatoes are an important part of the diet
    of pigs therefore, mean political power
  • Surprisingly, both sweet potatoes and pigs were
    introduced to New Guinea fairly recentlythey
    were domesticated elsewhere

42
  • New Guinea domesticates
  • Genetic research indicates that a wide number of
    plants were indigenously domesticated in New
    Guinea
  • These crops include yams, bananas, taro, and
    possibly sugarcane
  • None of these crops are cerealsno seed crops
  • Traditional agricultural processes in New Guinea
    involve transplanting suckers, cuttings, or
    shoots

43
  • The Andes environment
  • Andes are the second highest mountain chain in
    the world
  • The Andean highlands are divided into four zones
    based on altitude above sea level
  • 1. Quechua zone 2300-3500 m, where corn grows
    well
  • 2. Suni zone 3500-4000 m, where crops indigenous
    to the Andes are grown
  • 3. Puna zone 4000-4800 m, open grassland for
    grazing alpacas and llamas
  • 4. Cordillera zone above 4800 m, not used for
    agriculture

44
  • Andean domestication
  • Domesticated beans
    from Guitarrero
    Cave
    have been directly
    dated to 4300 BP.
  • Quinoa seeds have been found in layers 5700-4500
    years old at Panaulauca Cave
  • The earliest evidence for domesticated potatoes
    dates to 4000-3000 BP.
  • Probably not the earliest domesticate potatoes
    because they were found along the coast, not
    where wild potatoes grow

45
  • Andean domestication
  • Llamas and alpacas (camelids) were domesticated
    beginning10,000-5000 years ago
  • Llama as pack animal25 kg at most
  • Vicuña and Guanaco are still wild camelids
  • The other domesticated Andean animal is the
    guinea pig, when domesticated unknown, but
    perhaps after camelids

46
  • Preagricultural coastal villages
  • By 8000 BP small settled villages developed along
    the Peruvian coast
  • Houses were built of reeds and grasses over a
    wooden structure
  • About 10 families lived in a village at any given
    time
  • Burial data indicates that there were not higher
    status individuals

47
  • The Cotton Preceramic
  • Prevalence of cotton seeds and absence of pottery
    on its sites
  • These sites are often quite large and contain
    evidence of monumental architecture
  • The flat-topped pyramid, Huaca de los Idolos,
    dates to 5500-4500 BP., the earliest known
    monumental architecture in the New World
  • The bulk of the Cotton Preceramic diet consisted
    of fish and shellfish
  • Populations obtained gourds, squash, chili
    pepper, beans, and jicima from wild plants
  • The dominant crop species was cotton, also in the
    wild, used for making textiles and nets

48
Caral, World heritage site, 2009
49
  • Preagricultural coastal villages
  • Inhabitants of these villages were
    hunter-gatherers who relied heavily on the rich
    coastal marine resources
  • A wide range of wild plant resources including
    seeds, fruits, and tubers were exploited
  • Cultivated gourds were domesticated beans and
    squash may have been cultivated, but they were
    not significant parts of the diet

50
  • Pacific currents society
  • Humboldt Current brings cool waters up from the
    south along the Andean coast
  • Responsible for the wealth of marine resources
    that allowed villages to thrive without
    agriculture
  • El Niño a severe reversal of the Humboldt
    Current occurs every 25-40 years
  • When major El Niños occur, there is a massive
    decline in fish and shellfish populations on the
    coast

51
  • Pacific currents society
  • Also causes torrential rains that cause massive
    flooding and mud slides
  • Some argue that El Niños have only happened for
    about 6000 years
  • The onset of the Cotton Preceramic and El Niño
    seem to correlate
  • Perhaps climactic uncertainty played a role in
    the development of large centres with some
    reliance on agriculture

52
  • Domestication in East Asia
  • Rice was domesticated along the Yangtze and Huai
    River Valleys, China by 9000 BP.
  • Millet was domesticated in the Yellow River
    Valley, China by the
    Peiligang culture,
    c. 8000 BP.
  • Dogs, pigs, and water
    buffalo were domesticated
    in southern China
  • Pigs and, possibly,
    chickens were domesticated
    in northern China

Pottery vessels from Banpo Village site, China.
53
  • Development of Chinese farming societies
  • Yangshou culture developed out of the Peiligang
    culture of the Yellow River
  • Yangshou villages consisted of both round
    semisubterranean houses and rectangular houses
    built on the surface
  • Wild plants and animals were exploited
  • Millet was fully domesticated as were dogs and
    pigs
  • Pottery vessels were made in many forms with
    elaborate painted decorations

54
Mesoamerica and North America
55
  • Mesoamerican domestication
  • Squash (Curcurbita pepo) was the earliest plant
    domesticated in Mesoamerica
  • Earliest squash seeds dated to 10,000-8300 BP.
  • Ancestor of squashes eaten today including
    pumpkins, acorn squash, zucchini, spaghetti
    squash, etc.
  • Maize was domesticated from teosinte, a wild
    grass found in the highlands of Mexico
  • Earliest maize dated to 6250 and 5500 BP.

56
  • Mesoamerican domestication
  • Beans were domesticated independently in
    Mesoamerica and in the Andes
  • Earliest date for a Mexican bean is 2500 BP.
  • It is very likely that beans were domesticated
    earlier, at the same time as maize

57
  • Maize in SW North America
  • Maize and squash agriculture spread to northern
    Mexico and the southwestern U.S. about 3400 BP.
    in the Southwestern Late Archaic Period
  • Initial impact of maize and squash varied across
    the region
  • In some areas there was increased sedentism
  • In other areas, agriculture did not substantially
    alter the lives of the Late Archaic
    hunter-gatherers

58
  • The Formative period
  • The introduction of pottery into
    the American Southwest
    marks the beginning of the
    Formative period
  • The introduction of pottery
  • overlaps with the introduction of beans
  • Sites with pit houses are common in this period
  • Formative sites range in size from 1-2 houses to
    as many as 25-35one village site has 60 houses
  • Regional variation in the impact of maize
    continues into the Formative

59
  • Optimal foraging model
  • Assumes that humans act on the basis of rational
    self-interest to maximize efficiency in
    collecting and processing resources
  • Archaeologists use this theory to explain the
    variation in adaptation to the introduction of
    maize agriculture
  • According to optimal foraging theory, diversity
    exists in the uptake of maize agriculture as the
    result of rational decisions about the
    productiveness of the landscape and the returns
    from maize agriculture

60
  • Eastern North American domesticates
  • Late Archaic peoples of eastern North America
    independently domesticated a variety of plants
  • Including sunflower, marsh elder, chenopod, and
    squash
  • Late Archaic peoples also narrowed their
    subsistence baseespecially in areas with rich
    supplies of shellfish
  • Shell middens
  • The impact of domesticates on subsistence in the
    Late Archaic was minimal
  • Hunting and gathering continued to be the basis
    of Late Archaic subsistence

61
  • Adena
  • Adena culture corresponds to the Early Woodland
    period of Eastern North America
  • The Adena culture is found in the Ohio River
    Valley
  • During the Adena
    period increasingly
    large burial mounds
    were constructed
    accompanied by
    increasingly

    elaborate burial
    practices

The Great Serpent Mound, Ohio.
62
  • The Hopewell
  • In the Ohio River Valley, the Middle Woodland
    period corresponds to the Hopewella culture that
    built complex earthworks and had elaborate burial
    rituals
  • Some Hopewell mounds were built over structures
  • Massive earthworks were created in a number of
    forms including circles, squares, and octagons
  • Some mounds were created over a variety of types
    of burials, other mounds had intrusive burials in
    them

63
  • The Hopewell
  • The Hopewell exchange network moved exotic goods
    across huge distances
  • Quantities of expertly crafted objects made from
    exotic materials in burials indicate the status
    of elites

64
  • Hopewell settlement
  • According to the vacant centre pattern model,
    Hopewell earthworks served as the symbolic and
    ceremonial core of a community that lived across
    a wide area
  • Evidence indicates that
    some earthworks were
    occupied
  • Assessing the nature
    of Hopewell settlements
    is
    difficult because of
  • The widespread modern destruction of the
    earthworks and their massive scale
  • The low archaeological visibility of Hopewell
    habitation sites because of alluvial soil buildup

Hopewell bird claw.
65
  • Woodland subsistence
  • Early Middle Woodland subsistence was based
    heavily on the cultivation of indigenously
    domesticated plants
  • The earliest dates for maize in eastern North
    America are between 2000-1800 BP.
  • Maize is rare in the Early/Middle Woodland and
    did not play a major role in the diet
  • Throughout the Woodland period, hunting and
    gathering continued to be key elements of
    subsistence along with the cultivation of local
    domesticates

66
  • Maize Agriculture in Eastern North America
  • By the beginning of the Late Woodland, maize is
    found as far north as Ontario
  • Maize was cultivated throughout much of eastern
    North America by 1700 BP., however
  • Isotope analysis of skeletal remains indicates
    that maize did not play a major role in the diet
    until about 1000 years ago
  • Turkeys appear to have been domesticated during
    the Formative period
  • Turkey domestication in the Southwest and in
    Mesoamerica were separate events

67
  • Domestication Bruce Smiths model
  • A coevolutionary model for the indigenous
    domestication of plants in eastern North America
  • Smith states that climate change led to increased
    permanence of human settlements
  • The shift to more permanent settlements led to
    gradual ecological changes that resulted in the
    emergence of domesticated plants over a period of
    several thousand years

68
  • Domestication Smiths model, in 5 major stages
  • 1. Garbage heaps around long-term human
    occupations provided an excellent ecological
    niche for weedy plants. In these contexts, seeds
    that sprouted and grew quickly had an advantage
  • 2. People tolerated edible plants and removed
    unwanted plants
  • 3. People began to encourage and systematically
    harvest useful plants while weeding out useless
    ones
  • 4. Seeds of the best useful plants were
    deliberately planted every year
  • 5. Plants that were clearly morphologically
    domesticated emerged

69
  • Domestication Prentices model
  • Guy Prentice proposed that the domestication of
    plants might have been the result of intentional
    actions by individuals
  • Prentice argues that the introduction of
    domesticated squash into eastern North America
    was carried out by male shamans who would have
    used the gourds as rattles
    or ritual containers

70
  • Princess Point Complex
  • Found in southern Ontario dates to 650900 A.D.
  • Consisted of Algonkian-speaking hunter-gatherers
  • Important to the debate about whether maize
    exploitation (agriculture) moved into the area
    via migration from the south during this time, or
    whether it was adopted by local groups
  • Pottery is believed to have started 900 A.D.
    however, University of Toronto at Mississauga
    archaeologists David Smith and Gary Crawford have
    found evidence for both pottery and a degree of
    sedentism as early as 540 A.D. in the PPC
  • Suggests perhaps both local adoption of
    agriculture and migration

71
  • Gender Bias and domestication
  • Watson and Kennedy link the seeming invisibility
    of people in the origins of agriculture to gender
    bias
  • men are strong, dominant protectors who hunt
    animals women are weaker, passive, hampered by
    their reproductive responsibilities, and hence,
    consigned to plant gathering (Watson and Kennedy
    1991256)
  • Smiths domestication model is an example of the
    passive form of biasagriculture just happened
    unconsciously

72
  • Gender Bias and domestication
  • Prentices domestication model is active but,
    tellingly, the agent is explicitly male
  • Watson and Kennedy propose a model for the
    adoption of maize in eastern North America that
    emphasizes the active role of female gardeners
  • They propose that women, who already had
    extensive experience growing indigenous
    cultigens, actively experimented with the
    Midwestern 12-row maize to develop a variety that
    was better suited to their region

73
  • Gender Bias and domestication
  • The result was the development and spread of
    eastern 8-row maize
  • In this model, the adoption of maize in eastern
    North America was an achievement of the active
    intervention of women

74
  • Summing up the evidence
  • In eastern North America, hunter-gatherer groups
    had domesticated a number of plant species long
    before the introduction of maize agriculture
  • Regional variability continued into the Formative
    period
  • Archaeologists try to explain the pattern in
    terms of optimal foraging theory

75
  • Early and Middle Woodland Adena and Hopewell
    cultures
  • Massive earthworks constructed
  • Evidence for specialized craft manufacture
  • Long-distance trade in high status items
  • Nature of settlement systems remains poorly
    understood
  • Introduction of maize at the end of the Middle
    Woodland period had little impact of the diet
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