Settlement Scaling in the Northern Maya Lowlands: Human-Scale Implications
Creators
- 1. University of Kentucky
- 2. University of Chicago
- 3. Georgia State University
- 4. University of California, Riverside
- 5. University of Miami
Description
Settlement scaling theory predicts that higher site densities lead to increased social interactions that, in turn, boost productivity. The scaling relationship between population and land area holds for several ancient societies, but as demonstrated by the sample of 48 sites in this study, it does not hold for the Northern Maya Lowlands. Removing smaller sites from the sample brings the results closer to scaling expectations. We argue that applications of scaling theory benefit by considering social interaction as a product not only of proximity but also of daily life and spatial layouts.
Investigadores de relaciones de escala en asentamientos predicen que densidades altas resultan en el aumento de interacciones social, lo cual estimula productividad. Relaciones de escala entre población y área de asentamiento se manifiestan para varias sociedades antiguas pero, como se ve en nuestra muestra de 48 sitios, no se manifiestan para el norte de la Península de Yucatán. Quitando sitios pequeños produce resultados más semejantes a las expectativas de escala. Aplicaciones de relaciones de escala tienen que considerar interacciones sociales como producto no solamente de proximidad sino de la vida cotidiana y patrones de espacio.
Data availability
All relevant data are in Table 1 and the Supplemental Material.Files
Settlement-Scaling-in-the-Northern-Maya-Lowlands.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1017/laq.2022.103
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:7446