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MAKING A LIVING: GETTING FOOD

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MAKING A LIVING: GETTING FOOD Horticulture non-intensive plant cultivation, based on the use of simple tools and cyclical, non-continuous use crop lands. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MAKING A LIVING: GETTING FOOD


1
MAKING A LIVING GETTING FOOD
2
FORAGERS or GATHERERS AND HUNTERS
  • Subsistence derived from a combination of
    gathering and hunting
  • Survival of foraging economies still survive
    because their environment not suitable to food
    production.

A contemporary forager from Australias Cape York
peninsula collects eggs from the nest of a magpie
goose.
3
Correlates of Foraging
  • Band-organization (30-50) people -- flexibility
    allows for seasonal adjustments.
  • Mobile, at least seasonally nomadic -- Pattern of
    congregation and dispersal
  • Bands flexible in composition.
  • No permanent attachment to group or land.
  • Access to resources held communally.
  • Individual ownership of food, tools and other
    goods but strong pressure to share.

!Kung
4
  • Little difference in wealth, few material goods
  • Social and political organization are simpleAt
    most, headman without authority
  • Social control is informal
  • Limited means of food storage

The Agta of the Phillippines live by hunting,
gathering, fishing and exchange with lowland
farmers
5
  • No full-time specialists
  • Little warfare (conflict between groups)
  • Typical gender-based division of labor with
    women gathering and men hunting and fishing, with
    gathering contributing more to the group diet.
  • All foraging societies distinguish among their
    members according to age and gender, but are
    relatively egalitarian (making only minor
    distinctions in status)

6
  • Wide Variation in characteristics across H-G
    societies
  • degree of dependence on hunting vs. gathering
  • gender roles/ gender status
  • technologies used
  • Political organization

7
Foraging
Worldwide distribution of recent hunter-gatherers.
8
recent foragers have often been used to
understand prehistoric humans Caveats
  • Now in least desirable environmentstundra,
    desert, rain forest
  • Cultural changes in last 20,000 years
  • Natural environment has changed
  • Affected by other people

9
Horticulture
  • non-intensive plant cultivation, based on the use
    of simple tools and cyclical, non-continuous use
    crop lands.
  • Slash-and-burn or swidden cultivation and
    shifting cultivation are alternative labels for
    horticulture.
  • About 300 million people depended primarily on
    swidden cultivation for subsistence. 

slash-and-burn horticulture Ranomafana,
Madagascar.
10
Horticulturists
  • Slash-and-burn agriculture
  • Cyclical process
  • Burned vegetation, ashes nourish land
  • Land left fallow for several years
  • Tend to be less nomadic and more sedentary than
    foragers
  • Cultures include
  • Yanomamö
  • Tsembaga
  • Iroquois

Women planting taro in New Guinea 
11
  • Groups range from 100 to more than 5,000
  • Relatively settled, but nomadic within limits
  • Location of villages is shifted periodically to
    keep the near areas being cultivated but even so,
    villages usually remain in each location for
    several consecutive years. 

12
South American farmers. Women tend to be the
main producers in horticultural societies.
13
Horticultural Adaptations
  • Gardening, using tools that require human power
  • Domesticated plants
  • Shift in emphasis on role of women in kinship
  • Sedentism
  • Increased labor intensity
  • Surpluses
  • Social stratification
  • notions of private property, and ownership of
    land
  • warfare

14
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15
Pastoralists
  • Subsistence based on care of domesticated animals
  • Migration follows herds
  • Examples Bedouins, Nuer Lapps,
  • East African cattle complex
  • Supplement diet with gardens
  • Largely eat blood and milk from cattle, not meat

Bedouins
16
Pastoralism
A female pastoralist who is a member of the
Kirgiz ethnic group in Xinjiang Province, China.
17
Pastoral Nomadism
all members of the pastoral society follow the
herd throughout the year. (Iran)
18
Transhumance
Part of the society follows the herd, while the
other part maintains a home village (this is
usually associated with some cultivation by the
pastoralists).
19
East African cattle complex
members of such economies may get agricultural
produce through trade or their own subsidiary
cultivation
20
Agriculture
  • cultivation involving continuous use of crop land
    more labor-intensive than horticulture due to
    needs generated by farm animals and crop land
    formation)
  • Domesticated animals are commonly used in
    agriculture, mainly to ease labor and provide
    manure.
  • Irrigation is one of the agricultural techniques
    that frees cultivation from seasonal domination.

21
Agriculture
Irrigated and terraced rice fields used by the
rice farmers of Luzon in the Philippines.
22
Agriculture Costs and Benefits
  • Agriculture is far more labor-intensive and
    capital-intensive than horticulture, but does not
    necessarily yield more than horticulture does
    (under ideal conditions).
  • Agricultures long-term production (per area) is
    far more stable than horticultures.
  • Intensified food production is associated with
    sedentism and rapid population increase.

Top Egyptian shaduf
23
The Cultivation Continuum
  • In reality, non-industrial economies do not
    always fit cleanly into the distinct categories
    given above, thus it is useful to think in terms
    of a cultivation continuum.
  • Sectorial fallowing a plot of land may be
    planted two-to-three years before shifting (as
    with the Kuikuru, South American manioc
    horticulturalists) then allowed to lie fallow for
    a period of years.

24
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