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Population growth and collapse in a multiagent model of the Kayenta Anasazi in Long House Valley
Authors:Axtell Robert L  Epstein Joshua M  Dean Jeffrey S  Gumerman George J  Swedlund Alan C  Harburger Jason  Chakravarty Shubha  Hammond Ross  Parker Jon  Parker Miles
Affiliation:Center on Social and Economic Dynamics, The Brookings Institution, Washington, DC 20036, USA. raxtell@brookings.edu
Abstract:Long House Valley in the Black Mesa area of northeastern Arizona (U.S.) was inhabited by the Kayenta Anasazi from about 1800 before Christ to about anno Domini 1300. These people were prehistoric ancestors of the modern Pueblo cultures of the Colorado Plateau. Paleoenvironmental research based on alluvial geomorphology, palynology, and dendroclimatology permits accurate quantitative reconstruction of annual fluctuations in potential agricultural production (kg of maize per hectare). The archaeological record of Anasazi farming groups from anno Domini 200-1300 provides information on a millennium of sociocultural stasis, variability, change, and adaptation. We report on a multiagent computational model of this society that closely reproduces the main features of its actual history, including population ebb and flow, changing spatial settlement patterns, and eventual rapid decline. The agents in the model are monoagriculturalists, who decide both where to situate their fields as well as the location of their settlements. Nutritional needs constrain fertility. Agent heterogeneity, difficult to model mathematically, is demonstrated to be crucial to the high fidelity of the model.
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