HOW TO MAKE A POLITY (IN THE CENTRAL MESA VERDE REGION)
Authored by Stefani A Crabtree, R Kyle Bocinsky, Timothy A Kohler, Paul L Hooper, Susan C Ryan
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1017/aaq.2016.18
Sponsors:
John Templeton Foundation
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
Java
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://github.com/crowcanyon/vep_sim_beyondhooperville
Abstract
The degree to which prehispanic societies in the northern upland
Southwest were hierarchical or egalitarian is still debated and seems
likely to have changed through time. This paper examines the
plausibility of village-spanning polities in the northern Southwest by
simulating the coevolution of hierarchy and warfare using extensions to
the Village Ecodynamics Project's agent-based model. We additionally
compile empirical data on the population size distribution of
habitations and ritual spaces (kivas) and the social groups that used
them in three large regions of the Pueblo Southwest and analyze these
through time. All lines of evidence refute an ``autonomous village{''}
model during the Pueblo II period (A.D. 890-1145); rather, they support
the existence of village-spanning polities during the Pueblo II and
probably into the Pueblo III period (A.D. 1145-1285) in some areas. One
or more polities connecting the northern Southwest, with tribute flowing
to an apex in Chaco Canyon, appears plausible during Pueblo II for the
areas we examine. During Pueblo III, more local organizations likely
held sway until depopulation in the late thirteenth century.
Tags
Archaeology
Inequality
American Southwest
Organization
Villages
Cities
Societies
Chaco canyon
Puebloan southwest
Hierarchies