Michael Cannon: CSU Long Beach Department of AnthropologySome archaeologists have used a model of optimal time allocation from human behavioral ecology to help explain variability over space and time in the importance of farming vs. foraging. I discuss a model that builds on this previous work in an effort to enable a more detailed understanding of the factors relevant to the development of prehistoric agriculture. This model is more explicit about the activities involved in agriculture, modeling the costs and benefits of harvest-producing activities and post-harvest processing activities separately; this potentially provides a means for integrating labor division into the model. The model also enables a consideration of the roles that both mean productive efficiency and variability in production might play in the evolution of agricultural economies. Model predictions are evaluated against archaeological data from the American Southwest to clarify the factors that underlay increases in the importance of agriculture in this region.
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