Farming Systems and Political Growth in Ancient Oaxaca
- 27 October 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 158 (3800) , 445-454
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.158.3800.445
Abstract
The Valley of Oaxaca's large flat floor, high water table, low erosion rate, and frost-free floodplain give it a higher agricultural potential than that of most surrounding areas. The development of the pot-irrigation system early in the Formative period gave it a head start over other valleys, where the low water table did not permit such farming; Oaxaca maintained its advantage by assimilating canal irrigation, barbecho, infield-outfield systems, flood-water farming, and hillside terracing as these methods arose. With the expansion of population in the high-water-table zone of the high alluvium, competition for highly productive land and manipulation of surpluses may have led to initial disparities in wealth and status; competition probably increased when canal-irrigation systems were added during the Middle Formative, improving some localities to the point where one residental group owned land more valuable than that of its neighbors.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Early Cultures and Human Ecology in South Coastal GuatemalaSmithsonian Contributions to Anthropology, 1967
- Notes on Projectile Points in Oaxaca, MexicoAmerican Antiquity, 1966
- Ancient Mesoamerican CivilizationScience, 1964
- Preliminary Archaeological Investigations in the Sierra de Tamaulipas, MexicoTransactions of the American Philosophical Society, 1958