Title: Patterns of Subsistence
1Chapter 7
1
2What Will You Learn?
- Recognize the relationship between cultural
adaptation and long-term cultural change. - Distinguish between the different food-collecting
and food-producing systems. - Analyze the relationship between the environment,
technology, and social organization in cultures. - Assess the significance of the Neolithic
revolution. - Explain the process of parallel and convergent
evolution. - Critically discuss mass food production in the
age of globalization.
2
3Adaptation and Environment
- Throughout human antiquity it is known that
humans must have the ability to constantly make
cultural adaptations to better survive and thrive
in their natural environments or ecosystems.
Meeting humans most basic needs are finding
efficient methods to obtain food, shelter, and
fresh water. - Ecosystem- functioning system that is comprised
of both the natural environment and the organisms
that inhabit it.
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4Adaptation in Cultural Evolution
- Human groups adapt to their environment by means
of their cultures. However, cultures may change
over the course of time they evolve. Cultural
Evolution is the process of cultures changing
over time. - The process is sometimes confused with the idea
of progress- the notion that humans are moving
forward to a better, more advanced stage in their
development toward perfection. - Not all changes turn out to be positive in the
long run, nor do they improve conditions for
every member of a society even in the short run.
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5Convergent Evolution A Case Study
- The Native American Comanche were from the
highlands of southern Idaho. They had
traditionally subsisted on wild grains, small
animals and the occasional large game that roamed
the region. They possessed simple technology and
equipment that was limited to what dogs could
carry on their backs. They considered their
shaman (spiritual and medicinal healer) as
holding the highest social power.
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6Convergent Evolution A Case Study
- Eventually the Comanche made a move towards the
Great Plains region where they encountered a
larger food supply such as free roaming bison. - Trade for horses and guns began with nearby
European settlers. - Over time Comanche traders began to hold a higher
power within the group, one above the shaman, as
they would go on raids to steal horses. - The society that started small and powerless,
converged into a powerful and wealthy tribe.
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7Convergent Evolution A Case Study
- The history of the Comanche is similar to the
historical accounts of the Native American
Cheyenne Indians. The Cheyenne Indians moved
from the woodlands of the Great Lakes regions
also into the Great Plains. Unlike the Comanche
they took up farming, which they later ceased to
focus on hunting and gathering. - Both tribes developed similar solutions to living
in the new environment.
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8Convergent Evolution
- Convergent Evolution as outlined by the Native
America Comanche and Cheyenne is best described
as the development of similar cultural
adaptations to similar environmental conditions
by different peoples with different ancestral
cultures.
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9Parallel Evolution
- The other type of cultural evolution apart from
convergent evolution is parallel evolution. The
development of farming took place simultaneously
in Southwest Asia and Mesoamerica. People in both
regions already had similar life ways. They both
became dependent on a narrow range of plant
foods. - Both developed intensive forms of agriculture,
built large cities, and created complex social
and political organizations.
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10An Ecosystemic Collapse The Tragic Case of
Easter Island
- Pictured here are the famous moai of Rapa Nui
or Easter Island. - Nearly 900 stone statues line the landscape of
the island. - Polynesian seafarers settled here some 800 yrs
ago, they prospered greatly and then faced an
ecosystemic collapse.
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11Cultural Areas
- From early on, anthropologists have recognized
that ethnic groups living within the same broad
habitat often share certain cultural traits. - These groups have been classified as cultural
areas, which are geographic regions in which a
number of societies follow a similar pattern of
life.
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12Cultural Areas
- This maps shows the major cultural areas that
have been identified for North and Central
America. Within each, there is an overall
similarity of native cultures, as opposed to the
differences that distinguish the cultures of one
area from those of all others.
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13Modes of Subsistence
- There are three main modes of subsistence
patterns. Each mode will involve not only
natural resources but also the developed
technology to effectively utilize those
resources. - 1.) Food Foraging Societies
- 2.) Food Producing Societies
- 3.) Industrialized Societies
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14Food Foraging Organization
- Four elements of food foraging organization
- Mobility
- Division of labor by gender
- Food sharing
- Egalitarian Social Relations
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15Characteristics of Food Foraging Societies
- Nomadic.
- Occupy marginal environments (desert, arctic,
tropical). - Small size of local groups (less that 100
members) limited by carrying capacity - The number of people that the available resources
can support at a given level of food-getting
techniques. - Populations stabilize at numbers well below the
carrying capacity of their land. - Egalitarian, populations have few possessions and
share what they have.
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16Mobility
- Mobility of food foragers is strongly limited by
their difficult living environments which they
occupy. For instance the distance between their
food supply and fresh water must not be so great
that more energy is required to obtain fresh
water than can be obtained from food.
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17Mobility
- As previously mentioned it is necessary for food
foraging groups to limit their population size
due to the carrying capacity. - Often this can create what is called a density of
social relations meaning that the limited
availability of resources forces larger groups to
live together. More people can create more social
conflicts.
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18Critical Thought
- Frequent nursing of children four or five years
acts to suppress ovulation among foragers. As a
consequence, women give birth to relatively few
offspring at widely spaced intervals. - How does this differ from the Western perspective
on breastfeeding?
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19Flexible Division of Labor
- Division of labor exists in all societies.
- Among food-foragers, the hunting and butchering
of large game as well as the processing of hard
or tough raw materials are almost universally
male occupations. - Womens work in foraging societies usually
focuses on collection and processing a variety of
plant foods, as well as other domestic chores
that can be fit to the demands of breastfeeding,
pregnancy, and childbirth.
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20Food Sharing
- Men and women will both share the fruits of their
labor. They each provide a different food
resource that they share with one another. - Food sharing among members and other nearby
groups can also provide the basis for creating
and maintain social allies and networks.
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21Egalitarian Social Relations
- Among many food foraging societies egalitarianism
is an important characteristic. - To be egalitarian means to have no status
differences among members of a group. Generally
the only status differences are with age and sex. - No one member will accumulate more goods than
another, thus eliminating jealously and potential
conflict.
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22Communal Property
- Food foragers make no attempt to accumulate
surplus foodstuffs, which is often a source of
status in other societies. - As a result food is typically shared throughout
the group and no one person or family achieves
wealth or status that hoarding might produce.
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23Rarity of Warfare
- Anthropologists have learned that warlike
behavior on the part of food-foraging peoples is
known, but this behavior is a relatively recent
phenomenon in response to pressure from
expansionist states. - In the absence of such pressures, food-foraging
peoples are nonaggressive and place more emphasis
on peacefulness and cooperation than they do on
violent competition.
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24Food Producers
- The New Stone Age or Neolithic the prehistoric
period beginning about 10,000 years ago in which
peoples possessed stone-based technologies and
depended on domesticated plants and/or animals. - This time period marks the emergence of a
transition to food producing.
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25Transition to Food Production
- The Neolithic revolution (transition) began about
11,000 to 9,000 years ago. It was a time of
significant culture change associated with the
early domestication of plants and animals with
settlement of permanent villages. - Probably the result of increased management of
wild food resources. - Begin the development of simple hand tools for
working the land.
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26Transition to Food Production
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27Types of Food Producing
- There are three main forms of food producing
subsistence patterns - 1. Horticulture
- 2. Agriculture
- 3. Pastoralism
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28Horticulture
- The cultivation of crops using simple hand tools
such as digging sticks or hoes. - Slash-and-burn cultivation (swidden farming).
- - An extensive form of horticulture in which the
natural vegetation is cut, the slash is
subsequently burned, and crops are then planted
among the ashes.
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29Agriculture
- Agriculture is defined as the cultivation of food
plants in soil prepared and maintained for crop
production. - It involves using technologies other than hand
tools, such as irrigation, fertilizers, and the
wooden or metal plow pulled by harnessed draft
animals.
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30Characteristics of Crop-Producing Societies
- Similar to food foragers who stay nearby their
food resources, food producers reside together
near their cultivated fields in fixed
settlements. - Historically, social relations would have been
egalitarian and similar to those of food
foragers. However, as settlements grew larger
in population size people had to share important
resources such as land and water, society became
more elaborately organized.
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31Pastoralism
- Pastoralism or animal husbandry is the
subsistence pattern of raising and maintaining
herds of domesticated animals, such as cattle,
sheep, and goats. - Pastoralists are usually nomadic. They share the
similar concern of food foragers for finding
fresh resources not only for their group but
their herds as well.
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32Intensive Agriculture
- As agriculture grows some farming communities
will turn from small villages into larger cities
including large centers of market exchange. This
allows other members of the community to engage
in other activities. - Carpenters, blacksmiths, sculptures, basket
makers, stonecutters. - Eventually this creates an urbanization.
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33Peasants
- As urbanization including new life ways and
complex culture these dwellers must rely on
farmers in rural areas for most of their food
supplies. - Over time it becomes increasingly important for
urban dwellers to seek control over rural areas.
Farmers eventually turn into peasants.
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34Peasants (continued)
- A rural cultivator whose surpluses are
transferred to a dominant group of rulers that
uses the surpluses both to underwrite its own
standard of living and to distribute the
remainder to groups in society that do not farm
but must be fed for their specific goods and
services in turn.
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35Industrial Food Production
- After the invention of the steam engine about 200
years ago in England (which replaces human labor
by machine labor) subsistence patterns changed in
some regions. - North America, Europe, Asia will become centers
of industrialization among areas of intensified
agriculture. - This has led to a multitude of technological
inventions that utilize oil, electricity, and
nuclear energy.
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36Industrial Food Production
- Throughout the 1800s and 1900s, this resulted
in large-scale industrial societies.
Technological inventions utilizing electricity
and nuclear energy brought about more dramatic
changes in social and economic organization on a
worldwide scale.
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37Large Scale Food Production
- In order to maximize profits, agribusinesses are
constantly streamlining food production and
looking for ways to reduce labor costs by
trimming the numbers of workers, minimize
employee benefits, and drive down wages.
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