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Chapter 7 Making a Living
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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.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: 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.

Chapter 7

Making a Living

Page 2: 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.

What We Will Learn

• What are the different ways by which societies get their food?

• How do technology and environment influence food getting strategies?

• How have humans adapted to their environments over the ages?

Page 3: 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.

Five Major Food Gathering Strategies

1. Food collection: collecting vegetation, hunting animals, and fishing.

2. Horticulture: plant cultivation with simple tools and small plots of land, relying solely on human power.

3. Pastoralism: keeping domesticated animals and using their products as a major food source.

Page 4: 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.

Five Major Food Gathering Strategies

4. Agriculture: horticulture using animal or mechanical power and some form of irrigation.

5. Industrialization: production of food through complex machinery.

Page 5: 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.

Human Adaptation

Humans adapt to climates in two ways:

1. Culturally - dietary patterns, levels of activities

2. Biologically - changes in the body

Page 6: 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.

Food Gathering and the Environment

• Most anthropologists agree that the environment sets limits on the form that food-getting patterns may take. Cultures help people adapt to inhospitable environments.

Page 7: 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.

Characteristics of Food Collecting Societies

• Low population densities.• Usually nomadic or semi nomadic rather

than sedentary.• Basic social unit is the family or band.• Contemporary food-collecting peoples

occupy the remote and marginally useful areas of the earth.

Page 8: 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.

Carrying Capacity

• The maximum number of people a given society can support, given the available resources.

Page 9: 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.

Optimal Foraging Theory

• A theory that foragers look for those species of plants and animals that will maximize their caloric intake for the time spent hunting and gathering foods.

Page 10: 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.

Food Collecting

• A form of subsistence that relies on the procurement of animal and plant resources found in the natural environment (aka foraging and hunting and gathering).

Page 11: 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.

Historically Known Foragers

Page 12: 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.

Question

• _______ is a basic form of plant cultivation using simple tools, small plots of land, and relies on human power.

a) Pastoralism

b) Horticulture

c) Food collection

d) Agriculture

Page 13: 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.

Answer: b

• Horticulture is a basic form of plant cultivation using simple tools, small plots of land, and relies on human power.

Page 14: 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.

Question

• The gathering of wild vegetation and the hunting of small game is the strategy of:

a) horticulture.

b) pastoralism.

c) agriculture.

d) food collection.

Page 15: 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.

Answer: d

• The gathering of wild vegetation and the hunting of small game is the strategy of food collection.

Page 16: 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.

Neolithic RevolutionFood Producing Societies

• Transition from food collection to food production began 10,000 years ago

• Humans began to cultivate crops and keep herds of animals.

• Humans were able to produce food rather than rely only on what nature produced.

Page 17: 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.

Ju/’hoansi

• Despite popular misconceptions, foragers such as the Ju/’hoansi do not live on the brink of starvation.

Page 18: 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.

Inuit• To survive in their

harsh environment, the Inuit from Nunavut, Canada, have had to develop a number of creative hunting strategies, including the recent adoption of snowmobiles.

Page 19: 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.

Changes Resulting From Food Production

• Increased population.• Populations became more sedentary.• Stimulated a greater division of labor.• Decline in overall health reduced the life

expectancy from 26 to 19 years.

Page 20: 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.

Why Food Production Led to Declining Health

• Foragers had a more balanced diet (plants and animal proteins).

• Farmers ran the risk of malnutrition or starvation if the crops failed.

• Increased population brought people into greater contact and made everyone more susceptible to parasitic and infectious diseases.

Page 21: 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.

Question

• It is not until ________, some 10, 000 years ago, that human beings began producing food by horticulture or animal husbandry.

a) the industrial revolutionb) the French revolutionc) the neolithic revolutiond) the aquaculture revolution

Page 22: 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.

Answer: c

• It is not until the neolithic revolution some 10, 000 years ago, that human beings began producing food by horticulture or animal husbandry.

Page 23: 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.

Horticulture

• The simplest type of farming, which involves the use of basic hand tools rather than plows or machinery driven by animals or engines.

• Horticulturalists produce low yields and generally do not have sufficient surpluses to develop extensive market systems.

• The land is neither irrigated nor enriched by the use of fertilizers.

Page 24: 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.

Shifting Cultivation (Swidden, Slash and Burn)

• A form of plant cultivation in which seeds are planted in the fertile soil prepared by cutting and burning the natural growth; relatively short periods of cultivation are followed by longer periods of fallow.

Page 25: 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.

Pastoralism

• Involves keeping domesticated herd animals and is found in areas of the world that cannot support agriculture because of inadequate terrain, soils, or rainfall.

• Associated with geographic mobility, because herds must be moved periodically to exploit seasonal pastures.

Page 26: 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.

Pastoralism: 2 Movement Patterns• Transhumance

• Some of the men move livestock seasonally to different pastures while the women, children, and other men remain in permanent settlements.

• Nomadism• There are no permanent villages, the whole

social unit of men, women, and children moves the livestock to new pastures.

Page 27: 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.

Tibetan Yak Herders

• Tibetan yak herders must movetheir animals periodically to ensureadequate pasturage.

Page 28: 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.

Social Functions of Cattle

• The use of livestock by pastoralists not only for food and its byproducts but also for purposes such as marriage, religion, and social relationships.

• Stock friendship• A gift of livestock from one man to

another to strengthen their friendship.

Page 29: 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.

Agriculture

• Uses technology such as irrigation, fertilizers, and mechanized equipment.

• Produces high yields and supports large populations.

• Associated with permanent settlements, cities, and high levels of labor specialization.

Page 30: 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.

Draft Animals

• The use of draft animals, as practiced by this farmer from Hoi An, Vietnam, involves a more complex form of crop production than swidden farming.

Page 31: 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.

Agriculture: Costs of Greater Productivity

• Can support many times more people per unit of land than the horticulturalist.

• Agriculturalists must devote vast numbers of hours of hard work prepare the land.

• Intensive agriculture requires a much higher investment of capital.

Page 32: 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.

Terraced Farming

• This terraced form of farming, as found in Indonesia, involves a long-term commitment to the land and a considerable expenditure of labor.

Page 33: 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.

Peasantry

• Rural peoples, usually on the lowest rung of society’s ladder, who provide urban inhabitants with farm products but have little access to wealth or political power.

Page 34: 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.

Question

• Because of its reliance on animal power and technology, ________ differs from horticulture, and is a more intensive and efficient system.

a) horticultureb) nomadismc) agricultured) pastoralism

Page 35: 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.

Answer: c

• Because of its reliance on animal power and technology, agriculture differs from horticulture, and is a more intensive and efficient system.

Page 36: 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.

Industrialization

• A process resulting in the economic change from home production of goods to large-scale mechanized factory production.

Page 37: 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.

Ecosystems

• This Kayapo woman from Brazil knows not to kill the foraging ants in her garden because they actually weed and fertilize her crops.

Page 38: 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.

Industrialized Food Production

• Uses more powerful sources of energy.• Requires:

• High levels of technology (such as tractors and combines)

• Mobile labor force• Complex system of markets

Page 39: 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.

Features of Four Major Food Procurement Categories

Foragers Horticulturalist

Population Size Small Small/moderate

Permanency of settlement

Nomadic (or semi)Generally sedentary

Surpluses Minimal Minimal

Trade Minimal Minimal

Labor specialization

None Minimal

Class differences None Minimal

Page 40: 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.

Features of Four Major Food Procurement Categories

PastoralistIntensive

agriculture

Population Size Small Large

Permanency of settlement

Nomadic (or semi) Permanent

Surpluses Moderate Usual

Trade Moderate Very important

Labor specialization

Minimal Highest degree

Class differences Moderate Highest degree