MAKING A LIVING: GETTING FOOD

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 7 Making a Living. What We Will Learn What are the different ways by which societies get their food? How do technology and environment influence.
Advertisements

Chapter 7 Making a Living. What We Will Learn  What are the different ways by which societies get their food?  How do technology and environment influence.
Subsistence, Economy, and Distribution: How Humans Do It
Making a Living Adaptive Strategies Foraging Cultivation Pastoralism
Subsistence Strategies Making a Living. Subsistence Strategies How people get food from their environment How people get food from their environment Ecological.
What does Subsistence Mean? Lesson 5: Patterns of Subsistence.
Patterns of Subsistence
Anthropology and economy
Ju/’hoansi Camps Traditional social unit Nuclear & extended families, ~10-30 people Flexible group of related people - Live together and move together.
Subsistence FORAGING AND HORTICULTURE. Learning Objectives: Subsistence Unit  1. Identify the subsistence patterns found in human societies  2. Identify.
Culture and Economic Systems  ***An economic system consists of 3 components Livelihood or production- making good or money Consumption- using up goods.
Subsistence Strategies. Objectives 4/10 Describe the typologies for subsistence strategies and political organizations. Compare typologies. ____________________________________.
Shifting Cultivation and Plantations
Chapter 16 Making a Living
Chapter 4 section 3: TYPES OF SOCIETIES
Women and Work. Aspects of Making a Living  Managing resources  Managing Labor  Production  Distribution.
Types of Societies 4.3.
Economies and Their Modes of Production. Copyright © Pearson Education Canada 2004 The KEY Questions n What are the characteristics of the five major.
MAKING A LIVING: GETTING FOOD. Subsistence derived from a combination of gathering and hunting Foraging economies still survive because their environment.
GETTING FOOD. Subsistence derived from a combination of gathering and hunting The primary reason for the continuing survival of foraging economies is.
Chapter 1 Part 2 The Neolithic Revolution M-W PHS.
UNIT FIVE AGRICULTURE: PRIMARY ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES ADVANCED PLACEMENT HUMAN GEOGRAPHY Session 2.
Sociology Ch. 4 S. 3: Types of Societies
Subsistence. Learning Objectives: Subsistence Unit  1. Identify the subsistence patterns found in human societies  2. Identify the cultural characteristics.
Subsistence AGRICULTURE AND PASTORALISM. Learning Objectives: Subsistence Unit  1. Identify the subsistence patterns found in human societies  2. Identify.
Adaptations to Environments Biological –Body shape –Hair form –Skin color –Other physical adaptations Cultural –Technology –Behavior –Belief systems –Sustainable.
Ju/’hoansi Camps Traditional social unit Nuclear & extended families, ~10-30 people Flexible group of related people - Live together and move together.
Five Major Ways of Getting Food 1.Food collection involves collecting wild vegetation, hunting animals and fishing. 2.Horticulture is plant cultivation.
Agenda Wrap up discussion of Yanomamo Wrap up discussion of Yanomamo Introduce: Pastoralist society--the herding adaptation Introduce: Pastoralist society--the.
Chapter 6 Understanding Human Adaptation. Chapter Outline  Foraging  Domestication  Horticulture  Intensive Agriculture  Pastoralism  Adaptation.
Adaptive Strategies Yehudi Cohen used the term adaptive strategy to describe a group’s system of economic production. Cohen has developed a typology of.
Economics. Economics  Economic system – part of society that deals with production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services  Tools used.
Chapter 7 Making a Living Key Terms. Subsistence strategies The ways in which societies transform the material resources of the environment into food,
Culture and the Environment: How Culture Affects How People Materially Sustain Themselves.
Chapter 6: Production & Exchange Objectives:  Identify and describe the four modes of subsistence  Distinguish between the three systems of exchange.
FOOD & SOCIETY Pre - state societies. food and society The relationship between society and food both shapes and is contingent on the TYPE of society.
The Cultural Landscape: An Introduction to Human Geography
Chapter 8 Economics. What We Will Learn  How do anthropologists study economic systems cross-culturally?  How do people use culture to help them adapt.
Energy, Food Production, & Population. Modes of Food Production Universally based on hunting & fishing, as well as the collection or gathering of wild.
Chapter 7 Making A Living. Chapter Questions  How do human cultures impact their environments?  In what ways do different societies make a living? 
Chapter 4.3 Types of Societies Societies across the world change based on environment, interaction, and time.
Types of Societies Chapter 4, section 3 Pgs
Chapter 4 section 3: TYPES OF SOCIETIES
Chapter 4, Section 3.  A group is a set of people who interact on the basis of shared expectations and who have some common identity.  Societies are.
Chapter 7, Getting Food Key Terms. agriculture A form of food production that requires intensive working of the land with plows and draft animals and.
Chapter 7, Adaptation: Environment and Cultures Key Terms.
Chapter 8- Economics Questions What is economizing behavior and how does this concept relate to anthropology? How are critical resources such as land allocated.
Chapter 8 Economics.
 Subsistence Strategy: Way a society uses technology to provide for the needs of its members  One of the most common ways in which sociologists classify.
Agricultural Geography Key Issue #2: Where are Agricultural Regions in Less Developed Countries (PINGs)?
Chapter 5 SOCIAL STRUCTURE AND SOCIETY. Social Structure and Status  Social Structure- the pattern of social relationships within a group. -Helps people.
Patterns of Subsistence
The Geography of Agriculture agriculture : deliberate growing of crops or raising of animals Why study agriculture?  Much of Earth’s dedicated to farming.
Legacy of Domestication Making A Living. Subsistence Strategies The ways in which societies transform the material resources of the environment into food,
TYPES OF HUMAN SOCIETIES A.K.A. – Economic Lifestyles.
Subsistence. Subsistence: Types of Subsistence Strategies – Food Collectors – Food Producers Horticulturalists Pastoralists Intensive (and mechanized)
Pop Quiz. 1.What is an example of a status set that is not “President”? 2.What is your status set? 3.What is your ascribed status? 4.What is another word.
APHuG Dec. 4 AGRICULTURAL REVOLUTIONS What is it? Where did it begin?
Making a Living Chapter 5. Adaptive Strategies Adaptive Strategies - Means of making a living Factors: Population density - number of people inhabiting.
TYPES OF SOCIETIES.  Role behavior happens in groups (the people you interact with on a daily basis)  The largest possible “group” to study is the society.
Making a Living Nanda, Chapter 5. Culture is Patterned… Humans have needs in common: Food Water Shelter Humans Have Resources in Common: Ecology Environment.
Chapter 5 Making A Living. Chapter Outline Where Have All the Icebergs Gone? Human Adaptation and the Environment Major Types of Subsistence Strategies.
Cassava Indigenous to South America, and a staple food in many African societies Very tough plant: very drought- tolerant, reproduces by cuttings, grows.
Patterns of Subsistence Part III. Neolithic The New Stone Age; prehistoric period beginning about 10,000 years ago in which peoples possessed stone-based.
Types of Societies.
SSF 1044: Introduction to Anthropology and Sociology
MAJOR AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION REGIONS
Types of Societies.
SUBSISTENCE STRATEGIES
Where are Agricultural Regions in Less Developed Countries?
Presentation transcript:

MAKING A LIVING: GETTING FOOD

ADAPTIVE STRATEGIES Foraging Horticulture Pastoralism Agriculture Industrialism

FORAGERS or GATHERERS AND HUNTERS Subsistence derived from a combination of gathering, hunting and fishing Foraging economies still survive because their environment is not suitable for food production. A contemporary forager from Australia’s Cape York peninsula collects eggs from the nest of a magpie goose.

Correlates of Foraging Band-organization (30-50) people -- flexibility allows for seasonal adjustments. Mobile, at least seasonally nomadic -- Pattern of congregation and dispersal Bands flexible in composition. No permanent attachment to group or land. Access to resources held communally. Individual ownership of food, tools and other goods but strong pressure to share. Ju/’hoansi (!Kung)

Little difference in wealth, few material goods Social and political organization are simple -- at most, headman without authority Social control is informal Limited means of food storage No full-time specialists Little warfare (conflict between groups) The Agta (Philippines) live by hunting, gathering, fishing and exchange with lowland farmers

Typical gender-based division of labor with women gathering and men hunting and fishing, with gathering contributing more to the group diet. All foraging societies distinguish among their members according to age and gender, but are relatively egalitarian (making only minor distinctions in status)

Wide Variation in characteristics across foraging societies degree of dependence on hunting vs. gathering gender roles/ gender status technologies used Political organization

Worldwide distribution of recent hunter-gatherers. Foraging Worldwide distribution of recent hunter-gatherers.

recent foragers have often been used to understand prehistoric humans Caveats Now in least desirable environments: tundra, desert, rain forest Cultural changes in last 20,000 years Natural environment has changed Affected by other people

Horticulture non-intensive plant cultivation, based on the use of simple tools and cyclical, non-continuous use crop lands. Slash-and-burn or swidden cultivation and shifting cultivation are alternative labels for horticulture. About 300 million people depended primarily on swidden cultivation for subsistence.  slash-and-burn horticulture Ranomafana, Madagascar.

Women planting taro in New Guinea Horticulturists Slash-and-burn agriculture Cyclical process Burned vegetation, ashes nourish land Land left fallow for several years Tend to be less nomadic and more sedentary than foragers Cultures include: Yanomamö Tsembaga Iroquois Women planting taro in New Guinea 

Groups range from 100 to more than 5,000 Relatively settled, but nomadic within limits Location of villages is shifted periodically to keep the near areas being cultivated but even so, villages usually remain in each location for several consecutive years. 

South American farmers South American farmers. Women tend to be the main producers in horticultural societies.

Horticultural Adaptations Gardening, using tools that require human power Domesticated plants Shift in emphasis on role of women in kinship Sedentism Increased labor intensity Surpluses Social stratification notions of private property, and ownership of land warfare

Pastoralists Subsistence based on care of domesticated animals Migration follows herds Examples: Bedouins, Nuer Lapps, East African cattle complex Supplement diet with gardens Largely eat blood and milk from cattle, not meat Bedouins

Pastoralism A female pastoralist who is a member of the Kirgiz ethnic group in Xinjiang Province, China.

Pastoral Nomadism all members of the pastoral society follow the herd throughout the year. (Iran)

Transhumance Part of the society follows the herd, while the other part maintains a home village (this is usually associated with some cultivation by the pastoralists).

East African cattle complex members of such economies may get agricultural produce through trade or their own subsidiary cultivation

Agriculture cultivation involving continuous use of crop land more labor-intensive than horticulture due to needs generated by farm animals and crop land formation Domesticated animals are commonly used in agriculture, mainly to ease labor and provide manure. Irrigation frees cultivation from seasonal domination. Egyptian shaduf

Agriculture Irrigated and terraced rice fields used by the rice farmers of Luzon in the Philippines.

Agriculture: Costs and Benefits Agriculture is far more labor-intensive and capital-intensive than horticulture, but does not necessarily yield more than horticulture does (under ideal conditions). Agriculture’s long-term production (per area) is far more stable than horticulture’s. Intensified food production is associated with sedentism and rapid population increase. Larger, permanent populations and organization of labour results in a centralized political structure – states High degree of specialization Hierarchical social structure

The Cultivation Continuum In reality, non-industrial economies do not always fit cleanly into the distinct categories given above, thus it is useful to think in terms of a cultivation continuum. Sectorial fallowing: a plot of land may be planted two-to-three years before shifting (as with the Kuikuru, South American manioc horticulturalists) then allowed to lie fallow for a period of years.