1 / 24

Technology & Mayas

Technology & Mayas. Chap. 3, Mayas - Ancient Civilization Rise and Fall population growth, gradual in ancient times intensification of agriculture and water management more social control - exploitation - rebellion expansion - wars - more territory - more control. CAUSES OF COLLAPSE.

dana
Download Presentation

Technology & Mayas

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Technology & Mayas • Chap. 3, Mayas - Ancient Civilization • Rise and Fall • population growth, gradual in ancient times • intensification of agriculture and water management • more social control - exploitation - rebellion • expansion - wars - more territory - more control

  2. CAUSES OF COLLAPSE • Rising costs of coordination, exploiting farmers • Stressed system - shocks: • change of climate • invasion • disease • rebellion • costs of warfare

  3. MAYA CLASSIC COLLAPSE 850 CE (A.D.) • Newest data • deciphering of Maya hieroglyphs • political history • warfare increases, rebellions also • biophysical evidence of climate change • drought 850-1050 CE • lack of domestic water - disease, thirst, water wars? • TERRACING conserves water in ground

  4. HOPES FOR US? • MODERN INDUSTRIAL CIVILIZATION • environmental impact info • socio-cultural impact & public health info • predicting with statistics, modeling • a chance to prevent collapse • political will ? • investing by the wealthy for the long term??

  5. OLD WORLD Mesopotamia China India Egypt Emerging info - ? S. Asia ? Africa NEW WORLD Andean Inca + Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador, N. Chile Mesoamerica Toltec(Teotihuacan, Valley of Mexico, Axtec) Olmec (southern Gulf) Maya(Yucatan + highlands) Oaxaca(Mixtec, Zapotec, Mt. Alban) First Civilizations

  6. PERIODS OF MAYA CIVILIZATION

  7. Maya Collapse ?? • Abandonment of southern cities in lowlands • Palenque (Chiapas, Mexico) • Copan, Edzna, Calakmul (S. Yucatan Peninsula • Tikal (Guatemala) • Copan (Honduras) • Caracol, Cerros, Lamanai (Belize)

  8. SURVIVORS • Highlands of Guatemala & Chiapas, Mexico • Northern Lowlands (northern half of Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico) • Cities continue, shifting cultivation also • Irrigation systems ??? • Sculpture, architecture, painting, ceramics

  9. Spanish Conquest • Exploitation, malnutrition, loss of resources. • Ecological disruptions -- new plants, animals, weeds • Virgin soil epidemics - New World • losses of 90% + in lowlands - malaria • losses of 70% + in highlands • Effects CONFUSED - 9th century collapse

  10. Ancient Cities • Dependence on rainfall agriculture plus simple irrigation systems, terracing • Global climate change - impacts agriculture • Local effects differ widely - wind patterns and rainfall throughout agricultural cycle. • Buffered by city gardening, smaller elite living off production by peasant farmers

  11. WATER DEFICIENCY • THIRST - kills faster than hunger (faster with high heat and humidity) • Skin diseases • lack of water for bathing, washing clothes (especially in tropics) • Varmints invade houses and grain storage • lack of water for cleaning • Malnutrition - lack of water for cooking grains and seeds, poor harvests from lack of rain.

  12. 6 MONTH DRY Jan. - May HURRICANES Aug. - Sept. FLOODING Aug. - Dec Karst topography limestone subsoil vertical cracks water seeps down and out to sea no rivers or lakes seasonal streams and ponds in some areas ENVIRONMENTAL CONSTRAINTS

  13. Aguadas & Chultunes • Chultunes - stonelined underground water storage cisterns for domestic use in towns • Aguadas - enlarged seasonal ponds, often lined with cement to prevent leakage • Canals and sloped village construction to drain water into aguadas and chultunes. • Continued use and communal maintenance until the arrival of piped water with wells and pumps

  14. Shifting cultivation (slash and burn), cyclicaluse/fallow Soil renewal from trees (roots, leaf fall) polycropping risk reduction, plant high and low, early and late low labor costs needs low population Intensive River diversion - rare Drained fields Raised fields bigger canals soil doubled on fields fish farming shading/water lilies - reduces evaporation Terracing - water & soil conserved Agricultural Adaptation to Maya Environment

  15. Old World draft animals horse cattle (oxen) pack animals donkey camel yak elephant New World llamas in Andes Animal Helpers + ENERGY

  16. TECHNOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES • Reduces incentive to develop wheel for transport • No wheel - no pulleys, other machinery • Energy - human back and social organization, detailed knowledge - modification of natural environment

  17. Linkages

  18. HOPES • HYDROGEN CELLS • SOLAR PANELS • WINDMILLS • GEOTHERMAL • EFFICIENCY OF USE

  19. POPULATION DENSITY • ANALYSIS OF POP. PRESSURE ON RESOURCES - ancient Mayas and culture change processes • assume 5 persons per housemound ??? • fails to include number of residences per peasant family -- divide by 3 or 4? • long fallow regimes - 20 years in each hamlet? • residence in town centers during dry season • grain storage in old houses

  20. VIDEO - Joya de Ceren • Maya Pompeii, El Salvador • Volcano covered peasant village - 600 CE • Produced food for Maya cities • Corvee labor for building projects • Estimate (Abrams), 2 months of labor twice in adult man’s life time, during dry season.

  21. Fairness & Rebellion • Early Classic Compensations • jade jewelry • seeing grand ceremonies • obsidian tools • polychrome ceramics (high quality dishes with colored glazes) • shells for jewelry • Late Classic - upper classes demand more and give less, growing gap between rich and poor. Rebellions, increased war between city-states.

  22. Zapatistas 1994 • Chiapas - indigenous peoples • defending land rights, precedents: • Mexican Revolution - Emiliano Zapata, national hero • Caste War of the Mayas of Yucatan 1848, de facto autonomy of Maya in Quintana Roo until Cancun. • Use of new information technologies • Taking their case to the internet, asking for support from abroad. Cell phones, computers, internet

  23. NAFTA & ZAPATISTA REBELLION • livelihood threatened by NAFTA • importing cheap corn, hidden US subsidies • no subsidies for these indigenous farmers • Goal - diversify production, produce for market efficiently, globalization • Result - increased poverty, rebellion to protect livelihood • UPDATE - holding autonomous territory, community organizing for mutual aid, asking for national political change 1994-2003 and counting . ..

More Related