Nonagricultural Cultivation and Social Complexity The Olmec, Their Ancestors, and Mexico's Southern Gulf Coast Lowlands

被引:29
|
作者
Killion, Thomas W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Wayne State Univ, Dept Anthropol, Detroit, MI 48202 USA
关键词
MAIZE ZEA-MAYS; PLANT DOMESTICATION; NICHE CONSTRUCTION; HUNTER-GATHERERS; RIVER VALLEY; SETTLEMENT; VERACRUZ; AGRICULTURE; PATTERNS; PACIFIC;
D O I
10.1086/673140
中图分类号
Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
030303 ;
摘要
Early civilization has been envisioned as a child of agriculture, a product of the Neolithic revolution proposed by V. Gordon Childe. However, archaeological and ethnographic records worldwide are replete with complex hunter-gatherers who rely on both wild and domesticated resources. Researchers now recognize that mixed or largely nonagricultural subsistence practices frequently supported sedentary groups and larger complex societies before agriculture dominated subsistence around the world. This article builds on a mixed/nonagricultural model proposed by several authors for one of Mesoamerica''s earliest complex societies, the Early Formative Olmec (1200--400 BC) of Mexico''s southern Gulf Coast lowlands. Presentation of the nonagricultural model seeks to expand the lexicon of early subsistence in the tropical lowlands and introduces mixed subsistence hunter-fisher-gardeners for the early Gulf Coast lowlands in the millennia before the Olmec proper. Paleobotanical evidence of maize and Early Formative artifact assemblages are examined for goodness of fit with the mixed model at the Formative Olmec centers of San Lorenzo Tenochtilan and La Venta and related sites in Veracruz and Tabasco, Mexico. Available data strongly recommend further testing of the nonagricultural model in the southern Gulf Coast lowlands and beyond.
引用
收藏
页码:569 / 606
页数:38
相关论文
共 2 条
  • [1] Dive characteristics of Common Loons wintering in the Gulf of Mexico and off the southern US Atlantic coast
    Kenow, Kevin P.
    Fara, Luke J.
    Houdek, Steven C.
    Gray, Brian R.
    Heard, Darryl J.
    Meyer, Michael W.
    Fox, Timothy J.
    Kratt, Robert
    Henderson, Carrol L.
    JOURNAL OF FIELD ORNITHOLOGY, 2023, 94 (01)
  • [2] Inferring ecological connectivity between populations of Opsanus beta (Goode & Bean, 1880) from the southern Gulf of Mexico and the South-western Atlantic coast
    de Carvalho, Barbara Maichak
    Martinez Perez, Jose Antonio
    Aguilar-Perera, Alfonso
    Quinones, Virginia Noh
    Gomes Tomas, Acacio Ribeiro
    Vitule, Jean
    Volpedo, Alejandra
    JOURNAL OF THE MARINE BIOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM, 2022, 102 (08) : 597 - 603