Deck 5: World-Systems of Foragers

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Question
Mortan Fried's description of egalitarian societies claims that:

A) people have access to natural resources and tools
B) people have open access to leadership positions
C) leadership is temporary
D) decision-making is consensual
E) a, b, c, d
F) neither a, b, c, or d
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Question
Leadership in hunting and gathering societies:

A) has high prestige
B) is inherited
C) entitles the leader to accumulate resources
D) confers power to tell others what to do
E) a, b, c, d
F) neither a, b, c, d
Question
Women rarely did big game hunting because

A) it was emotionally repulsive to them
B) a higher percentage of women were vegetarians
C) it was too great a risk to the prospect of bearing children
D) male aggression towards women kept them from learning the techniques
E) none of the above
Question
The average number of children in nomadic hunter-gatherer societies was about 4-5 children per family because:

A) hunting and gathering subsistence lends itself to child labor
B) in more sedentary societies children are more likely to be bored
C) it was against their spiritual beliefs to abort children
D) a, b, c
E) none of the above
Question
What were the main causes of the emergence of diversified foraging?

A) curiosity
B) depletion of big game
C) increase in population density
D) regional tool kit styles
E) desire for exotic lithics
F) b and c
Question
When and where did the first sedentary societies emerge?

A) Oxford on the River Thames in the 11ᵗʰ century
B) With the development of the television in the 1950s
C) The Levant about 11,000 years ago
D) In the Yellow River valley of China in the 16ᵗʰ century
E) On the Nile near what is now Cairo during the reign of the Scorpion King
Question
Diversified foragers

A) live in villages
B) usually combine hunting with fishing and the gathering of vegetable materials
C) hunt more small game than most nomadic foragers
D) live in permanent locations in which there is enough food all year
E) all of the above
Question
Prestige goods were used by the Wintu to

A) allow the headmen to control marriages
B) symbolize the solidarity of the village
C) trade with other villages when food was scarce
D) decorate graves
E) pay taxes to the Yana
Question
Sedentism first emerged when

A) some people got sore feet from traveling
B) planting was invented
C) some nomads figured out how to hunt and gather enough food without migrating all the time
D) people began living in the same village most of the year
E) couches were invented
F) c and d
Question
At the time of the arrival of Europeans the Wintu were

A) a tribe in Northern California
B) a group of people who spoke similar languages of the Penutian language family
C) nomadic foragers
D) good friends with the Yana
E) slowly losing territory to their neighbors
F) a and b
Question
The prestige good network in which the Wintu participated was

A) based on trade with neighbors, but goods moved from group to group over long distances
B) facilitated by the use of clam shell disc beads as a standardize medium of exchange
C) made possible by traders who carried goods over long distances
D) spatially smaller than the network of bulk goods exchange
E) a and b
Question
Unlike domestic life in industrial-capitalist societies, families of nomadic hunter gatherers lived together inter-generationally.
Question
From what you have learned about hunter-gatherer societies it is clear that Marx's characterization of these societies as "primitive communism" is accurate.
Question
The choices nomadic hunter-gatherers made about what resources they exploited were entirely based on the food's nutritional value.
Question
In optimal foraging theory the choices hunters and gatherers made were rationally and consciously chosen.
Question
Unlike people living in industrial capitalist societies today, the economy of nomadic hunter-gatherers was altruistic.
Question
The spirits in hunter-gatherer societies were worshipped because there was no separation between the spiritual and secular world.
Question
According to the authors people do not imagine sacred hierarchies in the spiritual world until they have created political hierarchies in the material world.
Question
Polygamy was common among nomadic hunter-gatherers.
Question
The Yana had bigger villages than the Wintu.
Question
Diversified foragers combine different kinds of food resources.
Question
The phenomenon of pulsation is illustrated by archaeological evidence of the rise and fall of trade networks.
Question
Fill in the following table for patch choice theory (high or low?): Fill in the following table for patch choice theory (high or low?):  <div style=padding-top: 35px>
Question
Give an example from your life in which generalized reciprocity was operating with a friend. Justify why your example counts as generalized reciprocity.
Question
Fill in the following table which shows the minimum and maximum male-dominance

 Minimum Male  Dominance  Category of Comparison  Maximal male dominance  Climate Harshness or  Mildness  Abundance or scarcity of food  Population density Demographic sex ratios Social threat  Degree of labor-intensive  technology  Control over tools and  means of subsistence  Production for surplus or  production for subsistence  Integration or segregation  of work patterns  Integration or separation  of child-rearing practices  Greater tracing of descent  lines  Residency patterns (women go to live in the  male’s kin’s part of the  village [matrilocal] or whether  men go to live with the wives kin  part of the village [patrilocal]) \begin{array}{|l|l|l|}\hline \begin{array}{l}\text { Minimum Male } \\\text { Dominance }\end{array} & \text { Category of Comparison } & \text { Maximal male dominance } \\\hline & \begin{array}{l}\text { Climate Harshness or } \\\text { Mildness }\end{array} & \\\hline & \text { Abundance or scarcity of food } \\& \text { Population density} \\\hline & \text { Demographic sex ratios } \\\hline & \text {Social threat } \\& \text { Degree of labor-intensive } \\& \text { technology } \\\hline & \text { Control over tools and } \\& \text { means of subsistence } \\\hline & \text { Production for surplus or } \\& \text { production for subsistence } \\\hline & \text { Integration or segregation } \\& \text { of work patterns } \\\hline & \text { Integration or separation } \\& \text { of child-rearing practices } \\\hline & \text { Greater tracing of descent } \\& \text { lines } \\\hline & \text { Residency patterns } \\& \text {(women go to live in the } \\& \text { male's kin's part of the } \\& \text { village [matrilocal] or whether } \\& \text { men go to live with the wives kin } \\& \text { part of the village [patrilocal]) } \\\hline\end{array}
Question
Discuss the differences between nomadic and sedentary foragers and the evolutionary significance of the rise of sedentism before the emergence of gardening.
Question
Why did humans migrate to all the continents except Antarctica?
Question
What are the limitations on the use of documentary and ethnographic evidence for inferring the nature of foraging societies that existed before the rise of horticulture?
Question
Discuss the causes and consequences of the emergence of smaller and more regular yearly migratory circuits among nomadic foragers.
Question
Define and discuss the idea of the settlement size distribution as illustrated in Figure 5.2 in Chapter 5.
Question
In what ways were the Natufians similar to the Wintu?
Question
Why is California a good place to study diversified foragers?
Question
What is meant by the idea of "international relations" in Northern California before the arrival of the Euroamericans?
Question
What was the nature of core/periphery relations in indigenous Northern California?
Question
According the Chapter 5, what are the implications of the nature of the small-scale world-system in Northern California for the issue of transformation vs. continuation in sociocultural evolution?
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Deck 5: World-Systems of Foragers
1
Mortan Fried's description of egalitarian societies claims that:

A) people have access to natural resources and tools
B) people have open access to leadership positions
C) leadership is temporary
D) decision-making is consensual
E) a, b, c, d
F) neither a, b, c, or d
E
2
Leadership in hunting and gathering societies:

A) has high prestige
B) is inherited
C) entitles the leader to accumulate resources
D) confers power to tell others what to do
E) a, b, c, d
F) neither a, b, c, d
F
3
Women rarely did big game hunting because

A) it was emotionally repulsive to them
B) a higher percentage of women were vegetarians
C) it was too great a risk to the prospect of bearing children
D) male aggression towards women kept them from learning the techniques
E) none of the above
C
4
The average number of children in nomadic hunter-gatherer societies was about 4-5 children per family because:

A) hunting and gathering subsistence lends itself to child labor
B) in more sedentary societies children are more likely to be bored
C) it was against their spiritual beliefs to abort children
D) a, b, c
E) none of the above
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5
What were the main causes of the emergence of diversified foraging?

A) curiosity
B) depletion of big game
C) increase in population density
D) regional tool kit styles
E) desire for exotic lithics
F) b and c
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Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
When and where did the first sedentary societies emerge?

A) Oxford on the River Thames in the 11ᵗʰ century
B) With the development of the television in the 1950s
C) The Levant about 11,000 years ago
D) In the Yellow River valley of China in the 16ᵗʰ century
E) On the Nile near what is now Cairo during the reign of the Scorpion King
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Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Diversified foragers

A) live in villages
B) usually combine hunting with fishing and the gathering of vegetable materials
C) hunt more small game than most nomadic foragers
D) live in permanent locations in which there is enough food all year
E) all of the above
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Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Prestige goods were used by the Wintu to

A) allow the headmen to control marriages
B) symbolize the solidarity of the village
C) trade with other villages when food was scarce
D) decorate graves
E) pay taxes to the Yana
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Sedentism first emerged when

A) some people got sore feet from traveling
B) planting was invented
C) some nomads figured out how to hunt and gather enough food without migrating all the time
D) people began living in the same village most of the year
E) couches were invented
F) c and d
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
At the time of the arrival of Europeans the Wintu were

A) a tribe in Northern California
B) a group of people who spoke similar languages of the Penutian language family
C) nomadic foragers
D) good friends with the Yana
E) slowly losing territory to their neighbors
F) a and b
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The prestige good network in which the Wintu participated was

A) based on trade with neighbors, but goods moved from group to group over long distances
B) facilitated by the use of clam shell disc beads as a standardize medium of exchange
C) made possible by traders who carried goods over long distances
D) spatially smaller than the network of bulk goods exchange
E) a and b
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12
Unlike domestic life in industrial-capitalist societies, families of nomadic hunter gatherers lived together inter-generationally.
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k this deck
13
From what you have learned about hunter-gatherer societies it is clear that Marx's characterization of these societies as "primitive communism" is accurate.
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Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
14
The choices nomadic hunter-gatherers made about what resources they exploited were entirely based on the food's nutritional value.
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k this deck
15
In optimal foraging theory the choices hunters and gatherers made were rationally and consciously chosen.
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16
Unlike people living in industrial capitalist societies today, the economy of nomadic hunter-gatherers was altruistic.
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k this deck
17
The spirits in hunter-gatherer societies were worshipped because there was no separation between the spiritual and secular world.
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k this deck
18
According to the authors people do not imagine sacred hierarchies in the spiritual world until they have created political hierarchies in the material world.
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Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
19
Polygamy was common among nomadic hunter-gatherers.
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20
The Yana had bigger villages than the Wintu.
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21
Diversified foragers combine different kinds of food resources.
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k this deck
22
The phenomenon of pulsation is illustrated by archaeological evidence of the rise and fall of trade networks.
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23
Fill in the following table for patch choice theory (high or low?): Fill in the following table for patch choice theory (high or low?):
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24
Give an example from your life in which generalized reciprocity was operating with a friend. Justify why your example counts as generalized reciprocity.
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25
Fill in the following table which shows the minimum and maximum male-dominance

 Minimum Male  Dominance  Category of Comparison  Maximal male dominance  Climate Harshness or  Mildness  Abundance or scarcity of food  Population density Demographic sex ratios Social threat  Degree of labor-intensive  technology  Control over tools and  means of subsistence  Production for surplus or  production for subsistence  Integration or segregation  of work patterns  Integration or separation  of child-rearing practices  Greater tracing of descent  lines  Residency patterns (women go to live in the  male’s kin’s part of the  village [matrilocal] or whether  men go to live with the wives kin  part of the village [patrilocal]) \begin{array}{|l|l|l|}\hline \begin{array}{l}\text { Minimum Male } \\\text { Dominance }\end{array} & \text { Category of Comparison } & \text { Maximal male dominance } \\\hline & \begin{array}{l}\text { Climate Harshness or } \\\text { Mildness }\end{array} & \\\hline & \text { Abundance or scarcity of food } \\& \text { Population density} \\\hline & \text { Demographic sex ratios } \\\hline & \text {Social threat } \\& \text { Degree of labor-intensive } \\& \text { technology } \\\hline & \text { Control over tools and } \\& \text { means of subsistence } \\\hline & \text { Production for surplus or } \\& \text { production for subsistence } \\\hline & \text { Integration or segregation } \\& \text { of work patterns } \\\hline & \text { Integration or separation } \\& \text { of child-rearing practices } \\\hline & \text { Greater tracing of descent } \\& \text { lines } \\\hline & \text { Residency patterns } \\& \text {(women go to live in the } \\& \text { male's kin's part of the } \\& \text { village [matrilocal] or whether } \\& \text { men go to live with the wives kin } \\& \text { part of the village [patrilocal]) } \\\hline\end{array}
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26
Discuss the differences between nomadic and sedentary foragers and the evolutionary significance of the rise of sedentism before the emergence of gardening.
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27
Why did humans migrate to all the continents except Antarctica?
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28
What are the limitations on the use of documentary and ethnographic evidence for inferring the nature of foraging societies that existed before the rise of horticulture?
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Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Discuss the causes and consequences of the emergence of smaller and more regular yearly migratory circuits among nomadic foragers.
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30
Define and discuss the idea of the settlement size distribution as illustrated in Figure 5.2 in Chapter 5.
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31
In what ways were the Natufians similar to the Wintu?
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32
Why is California a good place to study diversified foragers?
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33
What is meant by the idea of "international relations" in Northern California before the arrival of the Euroamericans?
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34
What was the nature of core/periphery relations in indigenous Northern California?
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35
According the Chapter 5, what are the implications of the nature of the small-scale world-system in Northern California for the issue of transformation vs. continuation in sociocultural evolution?
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 35 flashcards in this deck.