Anthropology: Chapter 7
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            Food Foraging:
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        a mode of subsistence involving some combination of hunting, fishing, and gathering of wild plant foods.
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            Horticulture:
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        low-intensity, small-scale, agriculture using small fields, plots, or gardens that relies on human power and simple tools produce household consumption.
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            Pastoralism:
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        a type of agricultural activity based on the raising of livestock to provide food, clothing, and shelter.
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            Intensive Agriculture
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        large-scale and complex system of farming and animal husbandry (it is a more productive form of cultivation).
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            Industrial Agriculture:
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        farming on a much larger scale, relying on complex machinery, high-yeilding seed varieties, and domestic/export marketing produce.
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            Explain how people around the world use culture to adapt to their environment.
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        -cold climates: include "technological" solutions such as building fires, using animal skins, tend to eat more food, and engage in greater amounts activity.   -modern world: technology has enabled humans to adapt to a wide range of environment by producing vast amounts of food and protecting ourselves from the cold and heat by air conditioning and furnaces.   -remote area: have an enormous knowledge of plant life which is useful to eating, building houses, and curling illnesses.
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            What is the concept of carrying capacity?
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        the maximum number of people a given society can support.
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            What are the consequences of exceeding the carrying capacity?
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        exceeding the carrying capacity can damage the environment and societies can not easily increase their food getting productivity beyond the carrying capacity.
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            What is the theory of optimal foraging?
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        a theory that foragers choose those species of plants and animals that maximize their caloric intake for the time spent hunting and gathering.
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            What are the four generalizations about food collecting societies?
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        -food-collecting/foraging societies have low population densities  -foraging and collecting societies are usually nomadic or semi-nomadic  -the basic social unit among foragers and collectors is the family or band, a loose federation of families   -contemporary foraging and collecting peoples occupy the remote and marginally useful areas of the earth
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            Generalization 1: food-collecting/foraging societies have low population densities
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        this is because they have thresholds for extraction so that they do not overexploit their resources.
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            Generalization 2: foraging and collecting societies are usually nomadic or semi-nomadic
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        hunters need to be mobile to follow to migrating game. collectors are more likely to have a semipermanent residence with task groups going out to collect food items and then returning.
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            Generalization 3: the basic social unit among foragers and collectors is the family or band, a loose federation of families
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        the typical form of social organization among hunting and gathering families is small groups of kinsmen coming together at certain times of the year.
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            Generalization 4: contemporary foraging and collecting peoples occupy the remote and marginally useful areas of the earth
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        it is reasonable to suggest that these food-gathering, hunting-and-fishing societies, with their simple technology, have been forced into these marginal habitats by food producers with more complex technologies.
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            Ju/hoansi food collection strategies:
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        -had to keep moving in order to keep eating since food and water is sparse  -classic hunter and gatherers and possessed no domestic animals except their hunting dogs  -women provided two to three times more food by weight
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            Inuit food collection strategies:
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        -traditionally hunters and fishers living off arctic animal life   -the arctic has very little edible vegetation, so the inuit supplemented their diet with seaweed
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            Positive changes brought on by the Neolithic Revolution:
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        -farming can potentially generate more food per unit of land than hunters and gatherers  -store more food for times of scarcity, trade with others, and enable other members to specialize in non-food producing activities  -simulated a greater division of labor
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            Negative changes brought on by Neolithic Revolution:
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        -lead to a decline in overall health   -the egalitarianism of traditional hunting and gathering societies was replaced by increasing social inequality and other problems such as poverty, crime, war, and environmental degradation
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            What is horticulture?
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        small-scale crop cultivation characterized by the use of simple technology and the absence of irrigation
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            What is slash and burn agriculture?
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        involves clearing land by manually cutting down the growth, burning it, and planting in the burned area
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            What are the advantages of slash and burn agriculture?
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        -the ash residue serves as a fertilizer   -the land is then allowed to lie fallow until the natural vegetation is restored
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            What are the limitations of slash and burn agriculture?
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        -the soil nutrients are usually depleted within a few years  -can eventually destroy the environment if fields not given sufficient time to lie fallow
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            Transhumance pastoralism:
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        the movement pattern of pastoralist in which some of the men move livestock seasonally.
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            Nomadic pastoralism:
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        the movement pattern of pastoralist involving the periodic migration of human populations in search of food or pasture for livestock.
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            Describe the circumstances surrounding the emergence of a peasantry class.
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        -rural people who provide urban inhabitants with farm products but have little access to wealth or political power  -are subject to the laws and controls of the state and exchange their farm surpluses for goods produced in other parts of the state  -provide most of the dietary needs of city dwellers   -powerful city dwellers often extract both labor and products from the peasants in the form of taxation, rent, or tribute
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            What are the expenses and benefits of industrialized agriculture?
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        -increase productivity  -helps farmers with crop management  -enables famers to keep records on how much they harvest from each acre and the precise crop variety   -good for environment because it uses fertilizer more economically
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            What are the expenses of industrialized agriculture?
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        -requires complex systems of market change because of its highly specialized nature   -causes the demise of small-scale farms   -responsible for considerable environmental destruction: lower water tables, the ecology of bodies of water changing, water fauna destroyed by pesticides, soil is salinized from over-irrigation, and air pollution from crop spraying
