Weather, Land and Crops in the Indus Village Model: A Simulation Framework for Crop Dynamics under Environmental Variability and Climate Change in the Indus Civilisation

Author:

Angourakis AndreasORCID,Bates JenniferORCID,Baudouin Jean-PhilippeORCID,Giesche AlenaORCID,Walker Joanna R.ORCID,Ustunkaya M. CemreORCID,Wright NathanORCID,Singh Ravindra NathORCID,Petrie Cameron A.ORCID

Abstract

The start and end of the urban phase of the Indus civilization (IC; c. 2500 to 1900 BC) are often linked with climate change, specifically regarding trends in the intensity of summer and winter precipitation and its effect on the productivity of local food economies. The Indus Village is a modular agent-based model designed as a heuristic “sandbox” to investigate how IC farmers could cope with diverse and changing environments and how climate change could impact the local and regional food production levels required for maintaining urban centers. The complete model includes dedicated submodels about weather, topography, soil properties, crop dynamics, food storage and exchange, nutrition, demography, and farming decision-making. In this paper, however, we focus on presenting the parts required for generating crop dynamics, including the submodels involved (weather, soil water, land, and crop models) and how they are combined progressively to form two integrated models (land water and land crop models). Furthermore, we describe and discuss the results of six simulation experiments, which highlight the roles of seasonality, topography, and crop diversity in understanding the potential impact of environmental variability, including climate change, in IC food economies. We conclude by discussing a broader consideration of risk and risk mitigation strategies in ancient agriculture and potential implications to the sustainability of the IC urban centres.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Earth-Surface Processes

Reference85 articles.

1. The Indus Civilization: A Contemporary Perspective;Possehl,2002

2. The Ancient Indus: Urbanism, Economy and Society. Case Studies in Early Societies;Wright,2010

3. Indus urbanism: New perspectives in its origin and character;Kenoyer,2008

4. Landscapes of Urbanization and De-Urbanization: A Large-Scale Approach to Investigating the Indus Civilization’s Settlement Distributions in Northwest India

5. Trans-Regional Routes and Material Flows in Transcaucasia, Eastern Anatolia and Western Central Asia, c. 3000-1500 BC;Wilkinson,2014

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