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Who were the ancient Maya

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Title: Who were the ancient Maya


1
Who were the ancient Maya How did they get
their food?
2
The Maya (also known as the Mayan) are the
indigenous people of Meso-America. The territory
enveloped by the ancient Mayas included Mexico,
northern Belize, Guatemala, and western Honduras.
http//www.crystalinks.com/mayan.html
3
B.C.1200-1000 Olmec 1800-900
Early Preclassic Maya 900-300
Middle Preclassic Maya 300 B.C. -
A.D. 250 Late Preclassic Maya A.D.250-600
Early Classic Maya 600-900
Late Classic Maya 900-1500
Post Classic Maya 1521-1821
Colonial period 1821- today
Independent Mexico http//www.mexconnect.com/mex_
/travel/ldumois/maya/ldmayatimeline.html
4
  • What I found in regards to food production
    systems of the ancient Maya
  • No dearth of literature
  • Various theories abound
  • Many uncertainties

5
  • Swidden Cultivation, also known as
  • slash and burn
  • shifting agriculture
  • roza y tumba
  • agricultura nomada
  • milpa
  • Has been most frequently associated with the
    ancient Maya

6
  • Why? We may ask
  • the prevalence of swidden cultivation in the
    Maya lowlands during the European occupation
  • the absence of evidence that indicates intensive
    agriculture employed by the pre-Hispanic Maya

7
  • Why is this pertinent?
  • The prevalence to associate the ancient Maya with
    an exclusively swidden agricultural system
    assumed
  • essentially low density in Mayan settlements
  • limitations of Mayan technologies/ lack of
    capacity
  • the limitations to the swidden agricultural
    system and thus created a foundation for
    collapse theories based on an inefficient
    system (swidden agriculture)

8
  • Some findings that indicate the utilizations of
    other forms of agriculture
  • a mapped site in Belize gave a projected average
    population density of 1,036 people per km2 in
    certain settled areas
  • tools that would likely be used in a more
    intensive agricultural system
  • that no other high culture in America has relied
    completely on a single farming system
  • extensive use of terraces, may implicate the use
    of terraces in an intensive agricultural
    system

9
There is a fair amount of evidence that
indicates the use of terraces by the ancient
Maya. This intensive form of agricultural
cultivation tends to be more productive than
surrounding un-terraced hillsides due to
rejuvenation of soil through alluvial deposition.
According to Wilken (1971) terraces require
considerable investments of time and effort to
build and seem to be much more likely to be
carefully cultivated, weeded, fertilized, and
irrigated compared to un-terraced plots. Lundell
(1933) suggests that the terraces are evidence of
intensive cultivation versus Sanders (1962)
assertion that the terraces may have been used
for swidden cultivation
10
  • The most prevalent and varied terrace is the
    check dams (also known as weir terraces or
    cross-channel terraces, atajadizos, presas,
    teceras, terrazas, trincheras)
  • Check dams were constructed in intermittent
    stream ways (arroyos) in semiarid or arid regions
    that see sudden storms and where there is sparse
    vegetation, a landscape that tends to produce
    heavy erosion. The check dams reduce the speed of
    the flowing water and impede the waters ability
    to carry eroded materials and as the flow of
    water slows, the debris is deposited which forms
    flat, flood irrigated and sub irrigated fields
    behind the check-dam.

11
Sloping terraces essentially are a change in the
original gradient of a slope and there are many
variations of the structure of sloping terraces
Slope terraces act to accumulate moisture and
control soil erosion. (Wilken, 1987) Beach et al
(2002) points out that the fill stabilized the
walls and the walls trapped sediment that
resulted in rich planting beds
kwww.mayaexpeditions.com/archaeology/
piedrasnegras.html
www.mayaexpeditions.com/archaeology/
piedrasnegras.html
12
http//images.google.com/imgres?imgurlwww.ghcc.ms
fc.nasa.gov/archeology/images/mayan/bajos_tm.jpgi
mgrefurlhttp//www.ghcc.msfc.nasa.gov/archeology/
peten_bajos.htmlh481w505prev/images3Fq3Dan
cient2BMaya26start3D8026svnum3D1026hl3Den
26lr3D26ie3DUTF-826oe3DUTF-826sa3DN
13
Tablones are distinctly Guatemalan and are
essentially irrigated terraces that are generally
carefully designed planting beds separated by
deep irrigation trenches, that vary in size which
generally has do with the hill slope
configuration. They are thought to have been used
by the ancient Maya.
14
  • There is additional conjecture that the ancient
    Maya employed
  • chinampa or chinampa-type system was employed by
    the ancient Maya. (Wilken, 1971) A Chinampa is
    characterized by intensive hand labor, small
    plots which are separated by a network of water
    channels which replenish the soil with organic
    debris, mud, and aquatic plants and provide a
    source of accessible water for irrigation
  • fertilizers, such as bird or human manure, leaf
    litter
  • tree culture

15
  • In summary
  • There are various indications that the ancient
    Maya did not rely solely on a swidden
    agricultural system
  • This presentation has definite limitations,
    please indicate if I have incorrectly stated
    something or you have something to add
  • It is hard to ascertain the agricultural
    techniques employed by the ancient Maya by
    analyzing the pollen of maize
  • It is hard to determine why the Mayan
    civilization collapsed analyzing deer bone, to
    assess the availability of corn to the foraging
    herbivores
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