globalchange  > 过去全球变化的重建
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0140127
论文题名:
Settlement-Size Scaling among Prehistoric Hunter-Gatherer Settlement Systems in the New World
作者: W. Randall Haas Jr; Cynthia J. Klink; Greg J. Maggard; Mark S. Aldenderfer
刊名: PLOS ONE
ISSN: 1932-6203
出版年: 2015
发表日期: 2015-11-4
卷: 10, 期:11
语种: 英语
英文关键词: Archaeology ; Statistical models ; Behavior ; Statistical data ; Paleoanthropology ; Statistical distributions ; Culture ; Social systems
英文摘要: Settlement size predicts extreme variation in the rates and magnitudes of many social and ecological processes in human societies. Yet, the factors that drive human settlement-size variation remain poorly understood. Size variation among economically integrated settlements tends to be heavy tailed such that the smallest settlements are extremely common and the largest settlements extremely large and rare. The upper tail of this size distribution is often formalized mathematically as a power-law function. Explanations for this scaling structure in human settlement systems tend to emphasize complex socioeconomic processes including agriculture, manufacturing, and warfare—behaviors that tend to differentially nucleate and disperse populations hierarchically among settlements. But, the degree to which heavy-tailed settlement-size variation requires such complex behaviors remains unclear. By examining the settlement patterns of eight prehistoric New World hunter-gatherer settlement systems spanning three distinct environmental contexts, this analysis explores the degree to which heavy-tailed settlement-size scaling depends on the aforementioned socioeconomic complexities. Surprisingly, the analysis finds that power-law models offer plausible and parsimonious statistical descriptions of prehistoric hunter-gatherer settlement-size variation. This finding reveals that incipient forms of hierarchical settlement structure may have preceded socioeconomic complexity in human societies and points to a need for additional research to explicate how mobile foragers came to exhibit settlement patterns that are more commonly associated with hierarchical organization. We propose that hunter-gatherer mobility with preferential attachment to previously occupied locations may account for the observed structure in site-size variation.
URL: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0140127&type=printable
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资源类型: 期刊论文
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/22135
Appears in Collections:过去全球变化的重建
影响、适应和脆弱性
科学计划与规划
气候变化与战略
全球变化的国际研究计划
气候减缓与适应
气候变化事实与影响

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作者单位: Department of Anthropology, University of Maryland, 1111 Woods Hall, College Park, MD, 20742, United States of America;Department of Anthropology, SUNY College at Oneonta, 10 Denison Hall, Oneonta, NY, 13820, United States of America;Department of Anthropology, University of Kentucky, 1020-A Export St., Lexington, KY, 40506–9854, United States of America;School of Social Sciences, Humanities, and Arts, University of California Merced, 5200 Lake Road, Merced, CA, 95343, United States of America

Recommended Citation:
W. Randall Haas Jr,Cynthia J. Klink,Greg J. Maggard,et al. Settlement-Size Scaling among Prehistoric Hunter-Gatherer Settlement Systems in the New World[J]. PLOS ONE,2015-01-01,10(11)
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