Inferring Ancestral Pueblo Social Networks from Simulation in the Central Mesa Verde
Authored by Stefani A Crabtree
Date Published: 2015
DOI: 10.1007/s10816-014-9233-8
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
Java
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
https://www.academia.edu/1526170/Why_Can_t_We_Be_Friends_Exchange_Alliances_and_Aggregation_on_the_Colorado_Plateau_Crabtree_M.A._Thesis_2012
Abstract
Understanding exchange is essential for understanding past societies.
The exchange of knowledge and goods undeniably influenced the
development of Pueblo culture. Previous studies within Southwestern
archaeology have mostly focused on the exchange of material goods such
as ceramics or prestige items since these items do not decay, while
other day-to-day exchanges, such as the exchange of food items, are
relatively undetectable in archaeology. Sahlins (1972) notes that in
small-scale societies, food exchange is essential for the survival of
individuals in patchy landscapes. Moreover, Sahlins's research shows
that cross-culturally in small-scale societies, the exchange of food is
one of the fundamental structuring mechanisms for alliances. With this
knowledge, we may want to study the exchange of food within societies, but without being able to see the actual exchange, how can
archaeologists explore the impact of food exchange given the relatively
sparse archaeological record? In this paper, I use computer simulation
to explore the extent to which food-sharing practices would have been
instrumental for the survival of Ancestral Pueblo people across the
patchy landscape of the Prehispanic American Southwest and suggest that
we can see direct evidence of exchange through the aggregation of
households into clustered settlements. Social networks would have
created stable bonds among these exchanging individuals, further helping
the survival of those individuals and their progeny. Specifically, I
engage Sahlins's notion of balanced reciprocal exchange networks (BRN;
when unrelated individuals rely upon reputation building to inform
exchange relationships) within the experimental test-bed of the Village
Ecodynamics Project's agent-based simulation.
Tags
exchange
US Southwest
ecology
American Southwest
Topological parameters
Population aggregation
Cultural algorithms
Abandonment