Название: Harlan's Crops and Man
Автор: H. Thomas Stalker
Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited
Жанр: Биология
isbn: 9780891186366
isbn:
In general, there seems to be no model that has very wide application. Lee (1968) specifically investigated the situation of the aged among the Bushmen: “In a total population of 466, no fewer than 46 individuals (17 men and 29 women) were determined to be over 60 years of age, a proportion that compares favorably to the percentage of elderly in industrialized populations.”
It is evident, then, that the “nasty, brutish, and short” stereotype of the hunting–gathering life styles was a product of an egocentric sense of superiority and that all features of it are demolished by serious anthropological studies.
Conclusions
The ethnographic evidence indicates that people who do not farm do about everything that farmers do, but they do not work as hard. Gatherers clear or alter vegetation with fire, sow seeds, plant tubers, protect plants, own tracts of land, houses, slaves, or individual trees, celebrate first‐fruit ceremonies, pray for rain, and petition for increased yield and abundant harvest. They spin fibers, weave cloth, and make string, cord, baskets, canoes, shields, spears, bows and arrows, and ritual objects, recite poetry, play musical instruments, sing, chant, perform dances, and memorize legends. They harvest grass seeds, thresh, winnow, and grind them into flour. They do the same with seeds of legumes, chenopods, cucurbits, crucifers, composites, and palms. They dig roots and tubers. They detoxify poisonous plants for food and extract poisons to stun fish or kill game. They are familiar with a variety of drugs and medicinal plants. They understand the life cycles of plants, know the seasons of the year, and when and where the natural plant food resources can be harvested in greatest abundance with the least effort.
There is evidence that the diet of gathering peoples was better than that of cultivators, that starvation was rare, that their health status was generally superior, that there was a lower incidence of chronic disease (Lee & De‐Vore, 1968), and not nearly as many cavities in their teeth (Angel, 1984).
The question must be raised: Why farm? Why give up the 20‐hr work week and the fun of hunting to toil in the sun? Why work harder for food less nutritious and a supply more capricious? Why invite famine, plague, pestilence, and crowded living conditions? Why abandon the Golden Age and take up the burden?
References
1 Akazawa, T., & Aikens, C. M. (1986). Prehistoric hunter‐gatherers in Japan. Tokyo, Japan: University of Tokyo Press.
2 Angel, J. L. (1984). Health as crucial factor in the changes from hunting to developed farming in the eastern Mediterranean. In M. N. Cohen & G. J. Armelagos (Eds.), Paleopathology at the origins of agriculture (pp. 51–73). New York, NY: Academic Press.
3 Bancroft, J. (1884). Food of the Aboriginees of central Australia. Proceedings of the Royal Society of Queensland, 1, 104–106.
4 Bicchieri, M. (1972). Hunters and gatherers today. New York, NY: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston.
5 Burkill, I. H. (1935). A dictionary of the economic products of the Malay Peninsula. London: Oxford University Press.
6 Campbell, A. H. (1965). Elementary food production by the Australian Aboriginees. Mankind, 6, 206–211.
7 Chase, A. K. (1989). Domestication and domiculture in northern Australia: A social perspective. In D. R. Harris & G. C. Hillman (Eds.), Foraging and farming: The evolution of plant exploitation (pp. 42–54). London: Unwin Hyman.
8 Coon, C. S. (1971). The hunting peoples. Boston, MA: Little, Brown, and Co.
9 Coursey, D. G. (1972). The civilizations of the yam: Interrelationships of man and yams in Africa and the Indo‐Pacific region. Archaeology and Physical Anthropology of Oceania, 7, 215–233.
10 Cribb, A. B., & Cribb, J. W. (1975). Wild food in Australia. Sydney, Australia: Collins.
11 Dahlberg, F. (1981). Woman the gatherer. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
12 Downs, J. (1964). Significance of environmental manipulation in Great Basin cultural development. In W. L. D’Azvedo, W. A. Davis, D. D. Fowler, & W. Suttles (Eds.), The current status of anthropological research in the Great Basin (pp. 39–56). Reno, NV: Desert Research Institute.
13 Drucker, P. (1963). Indians of the Northwest Coast. Garden City, NY: Natural History Press. https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.68277
14 Fernald, M. L., & Kinsey, A. C. (1943). Edible wild plants of eastern North America. Cornwall‐on‐Hudson, NY: Idlewild Press.
15 Flannery, K. V. (1968). Archaeological systems theory and early Mesoamerica. In B. J. Meggers (Ed.), Anthropological archaeology in the Americas (pp. 67–87). Washington, DC: Anthropology Society.
16 Foley, R. (1988). Homonids, humans and hunter‐gatherers: An evolutionary perspective. In T. Ingold, D. Riches, & J. Woodburn (Eds.), Hunters and gatherers I: History, evolution and social change (pp. 207–221). New York, NY: Berg Oxford.
17 Fox, F. W., & Young, M. E. N. (1982). Food from the veld: Edible wild plants of southern Africa botanically identified and described. Johannesberg, South Africa: Delta Books.
18 Gentry, H. S. (1942). Rio Mayo plants: A study of the flora and vegetation of the valley of Rio Mayo, Sonora. Botanical Gazette, 104(4), 652.
19 Gifford, E. W. (1967). Ethnographic notes on the southwestern Pomo (pp. 1–48). Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
20 Gregory, A. C. (1886). Memoranda on the Aboriginees of Australia. Journal of Anthropological Institute, 16, 131–133.
21 Grey, G. (1841). Journals of two expeditions of discovery in northwest and western Australia during the years 1837, 38 and 39 under authority of Her Majesty’s government (Vol. 2). London: T. & W. Boone.
22 Hallam, S. J. (1975). Fire and hearth: A study of Aboriginal usage and European usurpation in southwestern Australia. Canberra, Australia: Australian Institute of Aboriginal Studies.
23 Harlan, J. R. (1967). A wild wheat harvest in Turkey. Archaeology, 20, 197–201.
24 Harlan, J. R. (1989). Wild grass‐seed harvesting in the Sahara and sub‐Sahara of Africa. In D. R. Harris & G. C. Hillman (Eds.), Foraging and farming: The evolution of plant exploitation (pp. 79–90). London: Unwin Hyman.
25 Harrington, J. P. (1932). Tobacco among the Karuk Indians of California. Bull. 284. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institute Bureau of Ethnology.
26 Harris, D. R., & Hillman, G. C. (1989). Foraging and farming: The evolution of plant exploitation. London: Unwin Hyman.
27 Hayden, B. (1981). Subsistence and ecological adaptations of modern hunter/gatherers. In R. Harding & G. Teleki (Eds.), Omnivorous primates (pp. 344–421). СКАЧАТЬ