Ancient Agriculture and Population at Tikal, Guatemala: An Application of Linear Programming to the Simulation of an Archaeological Problem
- 1 October 1980
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Antiquity
- Vol. 45 (4) , 697-712
- https://doi.org/10.2307/280142
Abstract
Population estimated for the Late Classic period at the Lowland Maya site of Tikal, Guatemala, is reviewed. Linear programming is described and suggested as a method for simulating the agricultural carrying capacity of the sustaining area of the site, thereby inferring its potential population. Archaeological data on the estimated size of the Tikal sustaining area is presented along with modern agricultural production and caloric output figures for maize, root crops, and ramon seeds. These data are used in the computation of a linear program. The results of the computer runs calculating the maximum population supportable by different combinations of milpa, intensive farming, and aboriculture are discussed. These results suggest that a mixed subsistence strategy in which ramon seed aboriculture and intensive root cropping were combined and were supplemented by kitchen gardening, hunting, gathering, and trade might have supported a population as high as 69,705 to 76,699 people within the boundaries of the site of Tikal during the Late Classic period.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lowland Maya Subsistence: Notes from Ethnohistory and EthnographyAmerican Antiquity, 1980
- Snail Shells and Maize Preparation: A Lacandon Maya AnalogyAmerican Antiquity, 1979
- The Utilization of Pomacea Snails at Tikal, GuatemalaAmerican Antiquity, 1978
- Intensive Agriculture among the Highland TzeltalsEthnology, 1977
- Marine Resources and the Prehistoric Lowland Maya: A CommentAmerican Anthropologist, 1972
- Food-Producing Systems Available to the Ancient MayaAmerican Antiquity, 1971
- An Experimental Approach to the Function of Classic Maya ChultunsAmerican Antiquity, 1971
- Marine Resources: A Viable Subsistence Alternative for the Prehistoric Lowland Maya1American Anthropologist, 1971
- Middle Mississippian Agricultural FieldsAmerican Antiquity, 1969
- Prehistoric Ceramics and Settlement Patterns in Quintana Roo, Mexico. William T. Sanders. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Publication 606, pp. 155-264, Contributions to American Anthropology and History, No. 60, Washington, 1960. 110 pp., frontis., 19 figs.American Antiquity, 1961