Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-j824f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-02T19:52:27.275Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Dukha Mobility in a Constructed Environment: Past Camp Use Predicts Future Use in the Mongolian Taiga

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 April 2019

Randall Haas*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of California, One Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616, USA
Todd A. Surovell
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Wyoming, 1000 E. University Ave. Laramie, WY 82071, USA
Matthew J. O'Brien
Affiliation:
California State University, Chico, 400 West First Street, Chico, CA 95929, USA
*
([email protected], corresponding author) https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7742-2127

Abstract

Diverse theoretical perspectives suggest that place plays an important role in human behavior. One recent perspective proposes that habitual and recursive use of places among humans may be an emergent property of obligate tool use by our species. In this view, the costs of tool use are reduced by preferential occupation of previously occupied places where cultural materials have been discarded. Here we use the model to generate five predictions for ethnographic mobility patterns. We then test the predictions against observations made during one month of coresidence with a residentially mobile Dukha family in the Mongolian Taiga. We show that (1) there is a strong tendency to occupy previously used camps, (2) previously deposited materials are habitually recycled, (3) reoccupation of places transcends kinship, (4) occupational hiatuses can span decades or longer, and (5) the distribution of occupation intensity among camps is highly skewed such that most camps are not intensively reoccupied whereas a few camps experience extremely high reoccupation intensity. These findings complement previous archaeological findings and support the conclusion that the constructed dimensions of human habitats exert a strong influence on mobility patterns in mobile societies.

Perspectivas teóricas diversas sugieren que el lugar cumplió un rol importante en el comportamiento humano. Una perspectiva reciente propone que el uso habitual y recurrente de lugares es una propiedad emergente del uso obligatorio de herramientas por nuestro especie. En esta visión, los costos de uso de herramientas son reducidos por una ocupación preferencial de lugares ocupados previamente, donde materiales culturales fueron depositados. Aqui usamos este modelo para hacer cinco prediciones para los patrones de movilidad de cazadores-recolectores. Despues probamos las prediciones en contra de observaciones de los movimientos residenciales de una familia Dukha en la Taiga de Mongolia. Mostramos que (I) hay una tendencia fuerte para ocupar los campamentos tomados previamente, (II) materiales depositados son reciclados habitualmente, (III) las re-ocupaciones de los lugares van más allá del parentesco, (IV) las interrupciones en ocupaciones podría abarcar décadas o más y (V) la distribución de la intensidad de ocupación de campamentos es muy sesgado, tal que la mayoría de los campamentos no se vuelven a ocupar intensivamente, mientras que muy pocos campamentos muestran una alta reocupación intensiva. Estos hallazgos se complementan con descubrimientos arqueologicos previos y apoyan la conclusión que las dimensiones construidas del hábitat humano ejercen un gran influencia en los patrones de movilidad en sociedades móviles.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2019 by the Society for American Archaeology 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aldenderfer, Mark S. 1998 Montane Foragers: Asana and the South-Central Andean Archaic. University of Iowa Press, Iowa City.Google Scholar
Andrews, Brian N., LaBelle, Jason M., and Seebach, John D. 2008 Spatial Variability in the Folsom Archaeological Record: A Multi-Scalar Approach. American Antiquity 73(3): 464490.Google Scholar
Barkai, Ran, Lemorini, Cristina, and Vaquero, Manuel 2015 The Origins of Recycling: A Paleolithic Perspective. Quaternary International 361:13.Google Scholar
Basso, Keith H. 1996 Wisdom Sits in Places: Landscape and Language among the Western Apache. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Bentley, R. Alexander, and Maschner, Herbert D. 2003 Complex Systems and Archaeology. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Bettinger, Robert L., Garvey, Raven, and Tushingham, Shannon, 2015 Hunter-Gatherers: Archaeological and Evolutionary Theory, 2nd ed. Springer, New York.Google Scholar
Binford, Lewis R. 1982 The Archaeology of Place. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 1(1):531.Google Scholar
Bird, Douglas W., and O'Connell, James F., 2006 Behavioral Ecology and Archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Research 14(2):143188.Google Scholar
Dodds, Peter Sheridan, and Rothman, Daniel H. 2000 Scaling, Universality, and Geomorphology. Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 28(1):571610.Google Scholar
Haas, Randall, Klink, Cynthia J., Maggard, Greg J., and Aldenderfer, Mark S. 2015 Settlement-size Scaling among Prehistoric Hunter-Gatherer Settlement Systems in the New World. PLOS ONE 10(11), e0140127.Google Scholar
Haas, Randall, and Kuhn, Steven L. (2019). Forager Mobility in Constructed Environments. Current Anthropology 60(4).Google Scholar
Haas, Randall, Surovell, Todd, and O'Brien, Matthew 2018 Occupancy and the Use of Household Space among the Dukha. Ethnoarchaeology 10(1):115.Google Scholar
Haas, Randall, and Llave, Carlos Viviano 2015 Hunter-Gatherers on the Eve of Agriculture: Investigations at Soro Mik'aya Patjxa, Lake Titicaca Basin, Peru, 8000–6700 BP. Antiquity 89(348):12971312.Google Scholar
Inamura, T. 2005 The Transformation of the Community of Tsaatan Reindeer Herders in Mongolia and Their Relationships with the Outside World. In Pastoralists and Their Neighbors in Asia and Africa, Ikeya, K. and Fratkin, E. (eds.), pp. 123152. National Museum of Ethnology, Osaka.Google Scholar
Kelly, Robert L. 2013 The Lifeways of Hunter-Gatherers: The Foraging Spectrum. Cambridge University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Kuhn, Steven L. 1995 Mousterian Lithic Technology. Princeton University Press Princeton, New JerseyGoogle Scholar
LaBelle, J. M. 2010 Reoccupation of Place: Late Paleoindian Land Use Strategies in the Central Plains. In Exploring Variability in Early Holocene Hunter-Gatherer Lifeways, edited by Hurst, Stance and Hofman, Jack L., pp. 3772. University of Kansas, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Laland, Kevin N., and O'Brien, Michael J. 2010 Niche Construction Theory and Archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 17(4):303322.Google Scholar
Lansing, J. Stephen, and Downey, Sean S., 2011 Complexity and Anthropology. In Philosophy of Complex Systems, edited by Hooker, Cliff, pp. 569601. Handbook of the Philosophy of Science, Elsevier, Oxford.Google Scholar
Larson, Mary Lou, Kornfeld, Marcel, and Frison, George C. 2009 Hell Gap: A Stratified Paleoindian Campsite at the Edge of the Rockies. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Lyman, R. Lee 2004 The Concept of Equifinality in Taphonomy. Journal of Taphonomy 2(1):1526.Google Scholar
Mitchell, Peter, Plug, Ina, and Bailey, Geoff 2008 Spatial Patterning and Site Occupation at Likoaeng, an Open-Air Hunter-Gatherer Campsite in the Lesotho Highlands, Southern Africa. Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association 16(1):8194.Google Scholar
O'Brien, Matthew J., and Surovell, Todd A. 2017 Spatial Expression of Kinship among the Dukha Reindeer Herders of Northern Mongolia. Arctic Anthropology 54(1):110119.Google Scholar
Odling-Smee, F. John, Laland, Kevin N., and Feldman, Marcus W. 2003 Niche Construction: The Neglected Process in Evolution. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.Google Scholar
Ortmann, Anthony 2010 Placing the Poverty Point Mounds in Their Temporal Context. American Antiquity 75:657678.Google Scholar
Song, Chaoming, Koren, Tal, Wang, Pu, and Barabási, Albert-László 2010 Modelling the Scaling Properties of Human Mobility. Nature Physics 6(10):818823.Google Scholar
Stiger, Mark 2008 Hunter-Gatherer Archaeology of the Colorado High Country. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Surovell, Todd A., and O'Brien, Matthew 2016 Mobility at the Scale of Meters. Evolutionary Anthropology: Issues, News, and Reviews 25(3):142152.Google Scholar
Walker, Marilyn 2009 The Reindeer Herders of Northern Mongolia: Community, Ecology, and Spirit Matters. Communities Summer(143):3539.Google Scholar
Wheeler, W. Allen 2000 Lords of the Mongolian Taiga: An Ethnohistory of the Dukha Reindeer Herders. Master's thesis, Department of Central Eurasian Studies, Indiana University, Bloomington.Google Scholar
Winterhalder, Bruce, Kennett, Douglas J., Grote, Mark N., and Bartruff, Jacob 2010 Ideal Free Settlement of California's Northern Channel Islands. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 29(4):469490.Google Scholar