Small-Scale Migrations among Early Farmers in the Sonoran Desert

IF 2.7 1区 历史学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
James T. Watson, Aaron Young, R. J. Sliva, Angela M. Mallard, Rachael Byrd
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Migration played a significant role in shaping the Native populations of the southwest United States and northwest Mexico. Large-scale migrations into and across the region were underlain by small-scale (intraregional) population shifts affected by environmental fluctuations (declines and improvements) and social phenomena such as aggregation and the spread of sociopolitical spheres of influence within the region. We compare projectile point types, mortuary patterns, and biodistance information from Early Agricultural period (2100 BC–AD 50) sites to identify subtle differences in population composition associated with the arrival and spread of maize across the region. Small-scale migrations occurring around the foundation of farming communities in the Sonoran Desert may have established the basis of broad regional connectivity, shared historical ties, and subsequent migration patterns and practices. Rooted in early farming traditions and a shared language family, we argue that farmers expanded north and east from the borderlands, then eventually returned to ancestral homelands when environmental and incursive pressures pushed them back south.

索诺兰沙漠早期农民的小规模迁徙
移民在塑造美国西南部和墨西哥西北部的土著人口方面发挥了重要作用。进入和跨区域的大规模移徙是受环境波动(下降和改善)以及区域内社会政治势力范围聚集和扩散等社会现象影响的小规模(区域内)人口转移的基础。我们比较了早期农业时期(公元前2100年-公元50年)遗址的抛射点类型、死亡模式和生物距离信息,以确定与玉米在该地区的到达和传播相关的种群组成的细微差异。索诺兰沙漠农业社区基础周围发生的小规模迁徙可能为广泛的区域连通性、共同的历史联系以及随后的迁徙模式和实践奠定了基础。基于早期的农业传统和共同的语言家庭,我们认为农民从边境地区向北和向东扩张,然后在环境和入侵压力迫使他们向南迁移时最终返回祖先的家园。
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来源期刊
American Antiquity
American Antiquity Multiple-
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
7.10%
发文量
95
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