Forager Mobility in Constructed Environments

Haas, Randall; Kuhn, Steven L.

Abstract

As obligate tool users, humans habitually reconfigure resource distributions on landscapes. Such resource restructuring would have played a nontrivial role in shaping hunter-gatherer mobility decisions and emergent land-use patterns. This paper presents a model of hunter-gatherer mobility in which the habitual deposition of material resources at places on landscapes biases the future mobility decisions of energy-optimizing foragers. Thus foragers effectively construct the environments to which they adapt. With the aid of an agent-based model, this simple niche-construction model is used to deduce four predictions for emergent structure in hunter-gatherer settlement patterns. The predictions are tested against archaeological data from a hunter-gatherer settlement system in the Lake Titicaca Basin, Peru, 7,000-5,000 cal BP. Good agreement is found between the predicted and empirical patterns, demonstrating the model's efficacy and suggesting a behavioral explanation for structural properties of hunter-gatherer settlement systems. The niche-construction behavior and its self-organized properties may have been key components in the emergence of socioeconomic complexity in human societies.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000481921800003 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGY
Volumen: 60
Número: 4
Editorial: UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
Fecha de publicación: 2019
Página de inicio: 499
Página final: 535
DOI:

10.1086/704710

Notas: ISI