Wealth inequality in the prehispanic northern US Southwest: from Malthus to Tyche

Author:

Kohler Timothy A.1234ORCID,Bird Darcy1,Bocinsky R. Kyle35,Reese Kelsey6,Gillreath-Brown Andrew D.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman, Washington 99164, USA

2. Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe, NM 87506, USA

3. Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez, CO 81321, USA

4. Department of Archaeology, University of Durham, Durham DH1 3LE, UK

5. WA Franke College of Forestry and Conservation, University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812, USA

6. Environmental Stewardship Group, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM 87545, USA

Abstract

Persistent differences in wealth and power among prehispanic Pueblo societies are visible from the late AD 800s through the late 1200s, after which large portions of the northern US Southwest were depopulated. In this paper we measure these differences in wealth using Gini coefficients based on house size, and show that high Ginis (large wealth differences) are positively related to persistence in settlements and inversely related to an annual measure of the size of the unoccupied dry-farming niche. We argue that wealth inequality in this record is due first to processes inherent in village life which have internally different distributions of the most productive maize fields, exacerbated by the dynamics of systems of balanced reciprocity; and second to decreasing ability to escape village life owing to shrinking availability of unoccupied places within the maize dry-farming niche as villages get enmeshed in regional systems of tribute or taxation. We embed this analytical reconstruction in the model of an ‘Abrupt imposition of Malthusian equilibrium in a natural-fertility, agrarian society’ proposed by Puleston et al . (Puleston C, Tuljapurkar S, Winterhalder B. 2014 PLoS ONE 9 , e87541 (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0087541)), but show that the transition to Malthusian dynamics in this area is not abrupt but extends over centuries This article is part of the theme issue ‘Evolutionary ecology of inequality’.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Office of the Chancellor, WSU-Pullman

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference71 articles.

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1. Settlement persistence in the prehispanic central Mesa Verde Region: A dynamic analysis;Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports;2024-06

2. Wealth inequality in the prehispanic northern US Southwest: from Malthus to Tyche;Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2023-06-26

3. Toward an evolutionary ecology of (in)equality;Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences;2023-06-26

4. Settlement Persistence in the Prehispanic Central Mesa Verde Region: A Dynamic Analysis;2023

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