CLIMATE CHANGE AND THE END OF THE CLASSIC PERIOD IN YUCATAN: Resolving a paradox
Recent paleoecological research indicates that the collapse of Classic Maya civilization in the southern and central Maya Lowlands coincided with the onset of prolonged and severe drought conditions around A.D. 850. The northern Maya Lowlands is an area that receives much less rainfall today and pro...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Ancient Mesoamerica 2002-07, Vol.13 (2), p.327-340 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Recent paleoecological research indicates that the collapse
of Classic Maya civilization in the southern and central Maya
Lowlands coincided with the onset of prolonged and severe drought
conditions around A.D. 850. The northern Maya Lowlands
is an area that receives much less rainfall today and probably
did so throughout most of the recent past; nevertheless, many
northern lowland sites not only persisted throughout the period
of the drought but actually prospered under the hegemony of
Chichen Itza. This paper attempts to resolve this obvious paradox
by examining the adaptive responses made by the northern Maya.
The northern lowlands had a slight edge in adapting to the climate
change that apparently devastated the south because it had easy
access to a diversity of resources that no doubt contributed
to Chichen Itza's subsistence security and the enrichment
of its realm. However, massive transformations in the political
and religious domains were every bit as necessary to Chichen
Itza's adaptive strategy. The seeming paradox of Chichen
Itza's successful adaptation to environmental adversity
represents a cautionary tale about the dangers of
oversimplification that are inherent in environmental deterministic
thinking. Paradoxes of this kind arise when the primacy of cultural
factors in adaptive processes is ignored. |
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ISSN: | 0956-5361 1469-1787 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0956536102132135 |