Deck 6: Getting Food
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Deck 6: Getting Food
1
Complex foraging societies like the Tlingit and the Nimpkish tend to have more __________ than most other foraging societies.
A) social inequality
B) elaborate folklore
C) reliance on hunting
D) balanced gender roles
A) social inequality
B) elaborate folklore
C) reliance on hunting
D) balanced gender roles
social inequality
2
Europeans who first saw the way South Pacific islanders maintained their gardens thought they were simply lazy. Why do they really allow their gardens to grow in such a messy state?
A) The jumbled roots minimize erosion in the loose volcanic soil.
B) They spend most of their days foraging, and don't have time to maintain tidy gardens.
C) Islanders believe their gardens should look as much like the jungle as possible.
D) They had only recently discovered horticulture, and their methods were still unrefined.
A) The jumbled roots minimize erosion in the loose volcanic soil.
B) They spend most of their days foraging, and don't have time to maintain tidy gardens.
C) Islanders believe their gardens should look as much like the jungle as possible.
D) They had only recently discovered horticulture, and their methods were still unrefined.
The jumbled roots minimize erosion in the loose volcanic soil.
3
Ester Boserup argues that the intensification of agriculture is __________.
A) not likely to develop naturally out of horticulture
B) associated with greater social equality
C) not linked to population growth
D) dependent upon a slow progression from animal husbandry and horticulture
A) not likely to develop naturally out of horticulture
B) associated with greater social equality
C) not linked to population growth
D) dependent upon a slow progression from animal husbandry and horticulture
not likely to develop naturally out of horticulture
4
What herding strategies do contemporary Saami use?
A) The Norwegian government now regulates reindeer herding.
B) They still herd animals, but have switched to sheep and goats.
C) They maintain their traditional nomadic lifestyle.
D) There are no longer any reindeer herders among the Saami.
A) The Norwegian government now regulates reindeer herding.
B) They still herd animals, but have switched to sheep and goats.
C) They maintain their traditional nomadic lifestyle.
D) There are no longer any reindeer herders among the Saami.
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5
By "food collection," anthropologists mean the obtaining of food from __________.
A) wild plants and animals
B) wild plants only
C) domesticated plants and animals
D) plants, wild and domesticated
A) wild plants and animals
B) wild plants only
C) domesticated plants and animals
D) plants, wild and domesticated
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6
On what factors is the division of labor based in most foraging societies?
A) gender and age
B) wealth and gender
C) age and status
D) status and wealth
A) gender and age
B) wealth and gender
C) age and status
D) status and wealth
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7
From where do most traditional pastoralists get their animal protein?
A) the milk and blood of the animals they raise
B) trading wool for cheese and yogurt in cities
C) the meat of the animals they raise
D) buying meat with cash earned through wage labor
A) the milk and blood of the animals they raise
B) trading wool for cheese and yogurt in cities
C) the meat of the animals they raise
D) buying meat with cash earned through wage labor
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8
What subsistence strategy characterized most of human history?
A) food collection
B) irrigation agriculture
C) horticulture
D) pastoralism
A) food collection
B) irrigation agriculture
C) horticulture
D) pastoralism
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9
In what activity do Yanomamö participate as part of their subsistence strategy?
A) hunting monkeys with bow and arrow
B) raising cattle and sheep
C) using irrigation to control farmland
D) planting coconut and banana trees
A) hunting monkeys with bow and arrow
B) raising cattle and sheep
C) using irrigation to control farmland
D) planting coconut and banana trees
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10
Which of the following is characteristic of foraging societies?
A) small group size consisting of related families
B) semi-permanent settled villages
C) social hierarchies reflected in ownership of land and wealthy possessions
D) high levels of social differentiation
A) small group size consisting of related families
B) semi-permanent settled villages
C) social hierarchies reflected in ownership of land and wealthy possessions
D) high levels of social differentiation
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11
In what region do we see the very first evidence of a changeover to food production, dating to around 8000 B.C.?
A) the Near East
B) the Indus Valley
C) Mesoamerica
D) eastern Europe
A) the Near East
B) the Indus Valley
C) Mesoamerica
D) eastern Europe
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12
Studies of two aboriginal Australian groups and one African foraging group suggest that foraging societies spend __________ time getting food than most agricultural societies.
A) less
B) more
C) about the same amount of D_ much more
A) less
B) more
C) about the same amount of D_ much more
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13
What did Paul Roscoe discover to be closely associated with a New Guinean foraging society's dependence on fishing?
A) population density
B) family structure
C) women's status
D) protein intake
A) population density
B) family structure
C) women's status
D) protein intake
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14
What form of horticulture involves working the land for a short time, then leaving it idle for a few years?
A) shifting cultivation
B) monocropping
C) cash cropping
D) permanent cultivation
A) shifting cultivation
B) monocropping
C) cash cropping
D) permanent cultivation
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15
How do Samoan villagers earn money to buy items such as machetes, kerosene, and flour?
A) They sell dried coconut meat to be made into coconut oil.
B) They sell traditional pieces of art to tourists.
C) They trade breadfruit with villagers on neighboring islands.
D) They raise sheep and sell the milk and wool.
A) They sell dried coconut meat to be made into coconut oil.
B) They sell traditional pieces of art to tourists.
C) They trade breadfruit with villagers on neighboring islands.
D) They raise sheep and sell the milk and wool.
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16
Most of the Ngatatjara's food supply is gathered by __________ and is __________.
A) women; plant food
B) men; plant foods
C) women; meat
D) men; meat
A) women; plant food
B) men; plant foods
C) women; meat
D) men; meat
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17
Which type of subsistence strategy has been practiced at one time in almost all areas of the earth?
A) foraging
B) pastoralism
C) horticulture
D) intensive agriculture
A) foraging
B) pastoralism
C) horticulture
D) intensive agriculture
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18
Beginning about __________ years ago, people in some regions began to depend less on big game and more on relatively stationary food resources such as fish, small game, and wild plants.
A) 14,000
B) 6,000
C) 10,000
D) 3,000
A) 14,000
B) 6,000
C) 10,000
D) 3,000
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19
Why must we be cautious about drawing inferences about our past from the lifestyles of modern foraging societies?
A) Like all societies, foraging societies have evolved and are still evolving.
B) Our ancestors had regular interactions with other societies, while modern foragers remain isolated.
C) Contemporary foragers live in environments that ancient foragers never used.
D) Modern foraging societies represent an artificial return to what people believe were the "old" ways.
A) Like all societies, foraging societies have evolved and are still evolving.
B) Our ancestors had regular interactions with other societies, while modern foragers remain isolated.
C) Contemporary foragers live in environments that ancient foragers never used.
D) Modern foraging societies represent an artificial return to what people believe were the "old" ways.
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20
What is one of the major consequences of horticulture?
A) more sedentary way of life
B) lower population density
C) strict egalitarianism
D) reliance on hunted game for protein
A) more sedentary way of life
B) lower population density
C) strict egalitarianism
D) reliance on hunted game for protein
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21
What is the role of cotton in the agricultural communities of rural Greece?
A) It is an important cash crop.
B) It is used to make warm clothing for the cold Greek nights.
C) Cotton is the major food for the communities' sheep.
D) Cotton is traded in an informal barter system with neighboring communities.
A) It is an important cash crop.
B) It is used to make warm clothing for the cold Greek nights.
C) Cotton is the major food for the communities' sheep.
D) Cotton is traded in an informal barter system with neighboring communities.
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22
In which region are foraging societies least likely to be found today?
A) temperate climates
B) dense tropical forests
C) deserts
D) the Arctic
A) temperate climates
B) dense tropical forests
C) deserts
D) the Arctic
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23
Anthropologists have concluded that the physical environment by itself has a __________, rather than a __________, effect on the major types of subsistence.
A) restraining; determining
B) definitive; determining
C) definitive; restraining
D) positive; negative
A) restraining; determining
B) definitive; determining
C) definitive; restraining
D) positive; negative
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24
In which areas is intensive agriculture unlikely to supplant horticulture?
A) tropical forests
B) the Arctic
C) plains
D) temperate climates
A) tropical forests
B) the Arctic
C) plains
D) temperate climates
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25
Societies that engage in pastoralism are characterized by __________.
A) small, highly mobile groups
B) a dependence on small animals like chickens or pigs
C) living in densely forested environments
D) a very high birth rate
A) small, highly mobile groups
B) a dependence on small animals like chickens or pigs
C) living in densely forested environments
D) a very high birth rate
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26
How might we best describe the subsistence strategies of contemporary cultures?
A) Most people today are food producers.
B) Most people today are foragers, supplemented with small-scale animal husbandry.
C) There is a roughly equal balance between foraging and food-producing cultures.
D) Most people today are foragers.
A) Most people today are food producers.
B) Most people today are foragers, supplemented with small-scale animal husbandry.
C) There is a roughly equal balance between foraging and food-producing cultures.
D) Most people today are foragers.
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27
Some believe that food production was adopted across the world within a span of only a few thousand years due to worldwide population pressure. With whose research does this position best align?
A) Mark Cohen
B) Ester Boserup
C) Lewis Binford
D) Kent Flannery
A) Mark Cohen
B) Ester Boserup
C) Lewis Binford
D) Kent Flannery
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28
What do Lewis Binford and Kent Flannery suggest must have influenced the changeover to food production?
A) Population growth pushed people out of optimal areas, and they turned to food production to try to reproduce the resources they once had.
B) People settled first, then realized that they would have to produce food to sustain their permanent residence patterns.
C) There was an economic incentive for foragers to become food producers.
D) Food production was spread culturally through contact with neighboring communities.
A) Population growth pushed people out of optimal areas, and they turned to food production to try to reproduce the resources they once had.
B) People settled first, then realized that they would have to produce food to sustain their permanent residence patterns.
C) There was an economic incentive for foragers to become food producers.
D) Food production was spread culturally through contact with neighboring communities.
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29
Which of the following factors may have contributed to the decline of the earliest city-states in Mesopotamia?
A) salinization
B) drought
C) overpopulation
D) flooding
A) salinization
B) drought
C) overpopulation
D) flooding
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30
One characteristic of pastoral societies is __________.
A) dependence on trade with agriculturalists
B) large settlements
C) permanent settlements
D) dependence exclusively on meat for food
A) dependence on trade with agriculturalists
B) large settlements
C) permanent settlements
D) dependence exclusively on meat for food
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31
The spread of agriculture may be linked to the need for __________.
A) territorial expansion
B) more food
C) permanent housing
D) saving animals
A) territorial expansion
B) more food
C) permanent housing
D) saving animals
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32
If climate change is involved in the emergence of agriculture, the transition may have occurred when __________ no longer provided sufficient resources to support the population.
A) sedentary foraging
B) nomadic foraging
C) slash-and-burn horticulture
D) animal husbandry
A) sedentary foraging
B) nomadic foraging
C) slash-and-burn horticulture
D) animal husbandry
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33
Which of these trends is associated with the increasing commercialization of agriculture?
A) A smaller proportion of society is involved in food production.
B) People are choosing to eat more locally produced foods.
C) Technology is being used to grow a wider variety of crops on a single field.
D) More food production is controlled by family-run operations.
A) A smaller proportion of society is involved in food production.
B) People are choosing to eat more locally produced foods.
C) Technology is being used to grow a wider variety of crops on a single field.
D) More food production is controlled by family-run operations.
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34
Although food production is not necessarily __________ than food collection, it is generally __________ per unit of land.
A) easier; more productive
B) harder; more productive
C) easier; less productive
D) harder; less productive
A) easier; more productive
B) harder; more productive
C) easier; less productive
D) harder; less productive
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35
Which of these is a consequence of intensive agriculture?
A) a high degree of craft specialization
B) a simple political organization
C) a transient, nomadic lifestyle
D) smaller population groups
A) a high degree of craft specialization
B) a simple political organization
C) a transient, nomadic lifestyle
D) smaller population groups
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36
Individual families in pastoral societies are most likely to own __________.
A) animals
B) grazing lands
C) permanent dwelling places
D) land for cultivating crops
A) animals
B) grazing lands
C) permanent dwelling places
D) land for cultivating crops
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37
In which of these environments would you be least likely to find a pastoralist society?
A) mountains
B) savannas
C) prairies
D) steppes
A) mountains
B) savannas
C) prairies
D) steppes
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38
Which of the following animals are least likely to be a source of food in a horticultural society?
A) camels
B) sheep
C) chicken
D) pigs
A) camels
B) sheep
C) chicken
D) pigs
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39
What herding system allows animals to roam over a large area and requires little surveillance?
A) extensive
B) intensive
C) internal
D) external
A) extensive
B) intensive
C) internal
D) external
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40
Using the anthropological definition, which of the following is an example of horticulture?
A) shifting cultivation
B) decorative flower gardening
C) large fields of cash crops
D) greenhouses for growing plants
A) shifting cultivation
B) decorative flower gardening
C) large fields of cash crops
D) greenhouses for growing plants
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41
Compared to food-collectors, horticulturalists generally __________.
A) get more food from a given area
B) are more nomadic
C) are more sparsely populated
D) have fewer differences in prestige between people
A) get more food from a given area
B) are more nomadic
C) are more sparsely populated
D) have fewer differences in prestige between people
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42
What is the difference between foraging and food production?
A) Foraging uses only wild plants and animals, while food production cultivates and domesticates them.
B) Food production depends only on plant foods, while foraging involves both plants and animals.
C) Foraging allows for more control over processes like animal breeding and plant seeding.
D) Food production requires a strict division of labor by gender, while foraging is rarely split by gender.
A) Foraging uses only wild plants and animals, while food production cultivates and domesticates them.
B) Food production depends only on plant foods, while foraging involves both plants and animals.
C) Foraging allows for more control over processes like animal breeding and plant seeding.
D) Food production requires a strict division of labor by gender, while foraging is rarely split by gender.
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43
What archaeological evidence is needed to support the Binford-Flannery model?
A) population increase before the emergence of domestication
B) evidence of seafood in conjunction with agricultural fields
C) artifacts indicating long periods of trade with food-producing societies
D) skeletal evidence of domesticated animals
A) population increase before the emergence of domestication
B) evidence of seafood in conjunction with agricultural fields
C) artifacts indicating long periods of trade with food-producing societies
D) skeletal evidence of domesticated animals
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44
What is the key feature that distinguishes intensive agriculture from horticulture?
A) Intensive agriculture uses techniques that allow people to cultivate fields permanently.
B) Intensive agriculture begins only after a population reaches a critical density.
C) Only intensive agriculture incorporates any sort of technology.
D) Horticulture produces foods for village use, while intensive agriculture focuses on crops to sell.
A) Intensive agriculture uses techniques that allow people to cultivate fields permanently.
B) Intensive agriculture begins only after a population reaches a critical density.
C) Only intensive agriculture incorporates any sort of technology.
D) Horticulture produces foods for village use, while intensive agriculture focuses on crops to sell.
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45
Distinguish between the three major types of food production: horticulture, intensive agriculture, and pastoralism. Provide examples of modern cultures practicing each type of subsistence.
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46
Imagine a global crisis that wiped out mechanized agriculture across the world. If your society were forced to return to a more localized subsistence strategy, what would be most appropriate for your environment? Explain your answer.
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47
What is the difference between animal husbandry and pastoralism?
A) Pastoralists feed their herds on natural pasture, while people engaged in animal husbandry provide special food to their herds.
B) Pastoralism allows for many more animals to be kept in a small space than does animal husbandry.
C) Pastoralism is associated with intensive agriculture, but animal husbandry is not.
D) Pastoralists eat their animals, while animal husbandry includes raising animals for milk or wool.
A) Pastoralists feed their herds on natural pasture, while people engaged in animal husbandry provide special food to their herds.
B) Pastoralism allows for many more animals to be kept in a small space than does animal husbandry.
C) Pastoralism is associated with intensive agriculture, but animal husbandry is not.
D) Pastoralists eat their animals, while animal husbandry includes raising animals for milk or wool.
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48
Compare the Binford-Flannery model with the research of Mark Cohen concerning the origins of food production by around 10,000 years ago. What evidence is required to support each of these theories?
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49
What development was necessary before foragers could live in tropical forest environments?
A) trade with agriculturalists to obtain carbohydrates
B) animal husbandry of small animals for protein
C) market economy to trade with neighbors for metal tools
D) an irrigation system to deal with heavy tropical rains
A) trade with agriculturalists to obtain carbohydrates
B) animal husbandry of small animals for protein
C) market economy to trade with neighbors for metal tools
D) an irrigation system to deal with heavy tropical rains
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50
Why are intensive agriculturalists more likely to face food shortages than horticultural societies?
A) Intensive agriculturalists often produce crops for market.
B) Horticulture is usually more productive than intensive agriculture.
C) Horticulture involves more complex and reliable technology.
D) Intensive agriculturalists usually live in more challenging environments than horticulturalists.
A) Intensive agriculturalists often produce crops for market.
B) Horticulture is usually more productive than intensive agriculture.
C) Horticulture involves more complex and reliable technology.
D) Intensive agriculturalists usually live in more challenging environments than horticulturalists.
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51
Why are the majority of intensive agricultural societies located outside of the tropics?
A) It is difficult to control insects and weeds in the tropics, making agriculture less productive.
B) Most societies in the tropics are too small to require intensive agriculture.
C) Tropical forests are so bountiful that people can easily survive on a foraging lifestyle.
D) Tropical environments are particularly well suited to pastoralism.
A) It is difficult to control insects and weeds in the tropics, making agriculture less productive.
B) Most societies in the tropics are too small to require intensive agriculture.
C) Tropical forests are so bountiful that people can easily survive on a foraging lifestyle.
D) Tropical environments are particularly well suited to pastoralism.
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52
Which horticulturalists are likely to be the most sedentary?
A) those who rely on food from trees that produce for a long time
B) a group that uses slash-and-burn agriculture
C) villages that raise chickens or pigs
D) a group that still relies heavily on foraging
A) those who rely on food from trees that produce for a long time
B) a group that uses slash-and-burn agriculture
C) villages that raise chickens or pigs
D) a group that still relies heavily on foraging
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53
Why should we not assume that food collectors would automatically switch to food production once they understood the process of domestication?
A) Food production involves more work and less security than food collection.
B) Food production cannot support as many people as food collection.
C) Food production is associated with a more complex diet than food collection.
D) Food production requires less specialized skills than food collection.
A) Food production involves more work and less security than food collection.
B) Food production cannot support as many people as food collection.
C) Food production is associated with a more complex diet than food collection.
D) Food production requires less specialized skills than food collection.
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54
What insights can we gain about humanity's past by studying the lives of contemporary foragers? What are the limitations associated with using modern foragers to help understand ancient humans?
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55
What social characteristics are associated with foragers and complex foragers?
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