Modeling initial Neolithic dispersal. The first agricultural groups in West Mediterranean
Authored by C Michael Barton, Sean M Bergin, Auban Joan Bernabeu, Gordo Salvador Pardo
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2015.03.015
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/4447/releases/1.2.0/
Abstract
In previous research, the SE-NW time-trend in the age of the earliest
Neolithic sites across Europe has been treated as a signal of a
global-scale process that brought farming/herding economies to the
continent. Residual variation from this global time-trend is generally
treated as `noise'. A Complex Adaptive Systems perspective views this
empirical record differently. The apparent time-trend is treated as an
emergent consequence of the interactions of individuals and group of
different scale.
Here, we examine the dynamics of agricultural dispersals, using the rich
body evidence available from the Iberian Peninsula as a case study. We
integrate two complementary approaches: (1) creating a high resolution
Agent Based Modeling environment to simulate different processes that
may have driven the spread of farming; (2) collecting and synthesizing
empirical archeological data for the earliest Neolithic settlements that
we use to evaluate our models results.
Our results suggest that, (a) the source of radiocarbon data used to
evaluate alternative hypotheses play an important role in the results;
and (b) the model scenario that produces de best fit with archeological
data implies a dispersal via northwestern and southern routes; a
preference for leap-frog movement; an influence of ecological conditions
(selecting most favorable agricultural land) and demographic factors
(avoiding settled regions).
This work represents a first attempt at high-resolution bottom-up
modeling of this important dynamic in human prehistory. While we
recognize that other social and environmental drivers could have also
affected the dispersal of agropastoral systems, those considered here
include many that have been widely considered important in prior
research and so warrant inclusion. (c) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights
reserved.
Tags
diffusion
Origins
Transition
Spread
Socioecological dynamics
Social-science
Europe
Wave
Advance
Iberia