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Subsistence Strategies

Subsistence Strategies. Making a Living. Subsistence Strategies. How people get food from their environment Ecological anthropology studies the interaction between societies and their environments Technology allows an area to support higher population density. Humans and the environment.

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Subsistence Strategies

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  1. Subsistence Strategies Making a Living

  2. Subsistence Strategies • How people get food from their environment • Ecological anthropology studies the interaction between societies and their environments • Technology allows an area to support higher population density

  3. Humans and the environment • Up until 10,000 ya humans foraged • About 10,000 ya we began to domesticate plants and animals • About 6,000 ya in new world • Domestic animals supported larger populations and sedentary villages developed • Sedentary life led to cultivation and more complex social structure

  4. Humans and the environment • Why did some societies remain foragers rather than adopt domestication? • In some environments foraging is more reliable

  5. Subsistence Strategies • Foraging – use plant and animal resources naturally available in the environment • Pastoralism – care of domesticated herd animals for dairy and meat food • Horticulture – production of plants using simple, non-mechanized technology • Agriculture – production of plants using more complex techniques that allow permanent cultivation • Industrialism – use of machine technology and chemical processes for the production of food

  6. Subsistence Strategies • Societies may use one or a combination of subsistence strategies • Resources can be extended by trading with a group that uses a different subsistence strategy

  7. Subsistence Strategies • Foraging – uses plant and animal resources naturally available in the environment • Hunting of large and small game • Fishing • Collecting various foods and plants • Supports low population density • Inuit of the Arctic Circle • Australian Aborigines

  8. Foraging • Inuit of the Arctic Circle • Rely on large animals, seals, whales, caribou • Depends on detailed knowledge of environment and animal behavior, patience, problem solving, cooperation, avoiding conflict • Men hunt, women process and distribute meat, oil, skins

  9. Foraging • Australian Aborigines • Plant foods available naturally, some hunting • Depends on detailed knowledge of environment, cooperation, food and water management • Men and women forage for plants and small animals

  10. Foraging • Social patterns associated with foraging • Seasonal nomadism, gather in larger groups seasonally • Organization of society into small camps with flexible membership

  11. Subsistence Strategies • Pastoralism - care of domesticated herd animals • Used in semiarid grasslands that do not support agriculture but grazing animals can digest grass • Herd animals produce milk and meat – cattle, sheep, goats, yaks, camels

  12. Pastoralism • Transhumant pastoralism – men and boys move animals to different pastures at different altitude or climatic zone while women and children remain a permanent village • Nomadic pastoralism – whole population, men, women and children move with the herd and there are no permanent villages

  13. Pastoralism • Complex interaction of land animals and people • Knowledge of how many animals the land can sustain • Knowledge of how many animals needed to support people in the group • Trade with sedentary neighbors necessary for grain and manufactured goods • Social pattern: • Patrilineal kinship

  14. Subsistence Strategies • Horticulture - production of plants using simple, non-mechanized technology • Allow fields to rest fallow after cultivation • Use only digging sticks or hoes, do not use plows, draft animals, or irrigation

  15. Horticulture • Swidden or slash and burn cultivation – • Trees are felled and brush is burned • Ash fertilizes soil • Fields used for 3 – 5 years • Fields lie fallow up to 20 years to allow forest to regrow • Requires 5- 6 times as much fallow land as cultivated land • Land will deteriorate if not allowed to lie fallow long enough

  16. Horticulture • No surplus food • Most horticulturists also keep domesticated animals or hunt • Social patterns: • diverse environments and diverse cultures • Most shift residence as they move fields but some maintain permanent villages

  17. Subsistence Patterns • Agriculture - production of plants using more complex techniques that allow permanent cultivation • Use of plow, draft animals, complex water and soil control, irrigation • Supports higher population density and requires more i labor

  18. Agriculture • Requires more investment of capital than horticulture • More vulnerable to environment because of reliance on few crops and draft animals

  19. Agriculture • Social patterns associated with agriculture • Sedentary villages, social stratification, occupational diversity, organization of state

  20. Subsistence Strategies • Industrialism – use of machine technology and chemical processes for the production of food • Consumption must constantly increase and standard of living must always go up • Shift from subsistence strategies to wage labor

  21. Industrialism • Globalization – integration of resources, labor, and capital into a global network • Industrial societies have at least two social classes: • Labor force • Managerial class • Smaller class that controls production and distribution

  22. Subsistence Strategies • Anthropology is in the position to study the various impacts of subsistence strategies on the environment and make a contribution to improve our care of the environment as well as production of food

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