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Social Adaptation to Food Stress: A Prehistoric Southwestern Example (Prehistoric Archeology and Ecology series)
 
 
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Social Adaptation to Food Stress: A Prehistoric Southwestern Example (Prehistoric Archeology and Ecology series) [Paperback]

Paul E. Minnis (Author)

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Book Description

0226530248 978-0226530246 April 1, 1985
Combining anthropology, archeology, and evolutionary theory, Paul E. Minnis develops a model of how tribal societies deal with severe food shortages. While focusing on the prehistory of the Rio Mimbres region of New Mexico, he provides comparative data from the Fringe Enga of New Guinea, the Tikopia of Tikopia Island, and the Gwembe Tonga of South Africa.

Minnis proposes that, faced with the threat of food shortages, nonstratified societies survive by employing a series of responses that are increasingly effective but also are increasingly costly and demand increasingly larger cooperative efforts. The model Minnis develops allows him to infer, from evidence of such factors as population size, resource productivity, and climate change, the occurrence of food crises in the past. Using the Classic Mimbres society as a test case, he summarizes the regional archeological sequence and analyzes the effects of environmental fluctuations on economic and social organization. He concludes that the responses of the Mimbres people to their burgeoning population were inadequate to prevent the collapse of the society in the late twelfth century.

In its illumination of the general issue of responses to food shortages, Social Adaptation to Food Stress will interest not only archeologists but also those concerned with current food shortages in the Third World. Cultural ecologists and human geographers will be able to derive a wealth of ideas, methods, and data from Minnis's work.

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About the Author

Paul E. Minnis, an archeologist and ethnobotanist, is assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Oklahoma at Norman.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
All people must eat, but the quantity and quality of the human diet may become inadequate for varying periods of time, from days and weeks to years and decades. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
food provisioning problems, granitic temper, large surface rooms, more inclusive responses, food acquisition problems, low preference foods, extraregional exchange, southwestern archeologists, food stress, nonstratified societies, intraregional exchange, archaeological synthesis, floodplain fields, prehistoric occupants, growing season precipitation, sociopolitical integration, edible biomass, period sites, shell artifacts, flotation samples, prehistoric economy, floodplain vegetation, crop success, prehistoric agriculture, period ceramics
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Classic Mimbres, Rio Mimbres, Late Pithouse, Early Pithouse, Mimbres Foundation, New Mexico, Casas Grandes, Fringe Enga, Upper Chihuahuan, Gwembe Tonga, Mimbres Black-on-White, Hidalgo County, Swarts Ruin, Cameron Creek, Classic Mimbreños, Pine Lawn Valley, Three Circle, Valley Enga, Florida Mountains, Kung San, Lower Chihuahuan, Ranch Ruin, Silver City, American Southwest, Harris Village
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