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      The Pre-History of Urban Scaling

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          Abstract

          Cities are increasingly the fundamental socio-economic units of human societies worldwide, but we still lack a unified characterization of urbanization that captures the social processes realized by cities across time and space. This is especially important for understanding the role of cities in the history of human civilization and for determining whether studies of ancient cities are relevant for contemporary science and policy. As a step in this direction, we develop a theory of settlement scaling in archaeology, deriving the relationship between population and settled area from a consideration of the interplay between social and infrastructural networks. We then test these models on settlement data from the Pre-Hispanic Basin of Mexico to show that this ancient settlement system displays spatial scaling properties analogous to those observed in modern cities. Our data derive from over 1,500 settlements occupied over two millennia and spanning four major cultural periods characterized by different levels of agricultural productivity, political centralization and market development. We show that, in agreement with theory, total settlement area increases with population size, on average, according to a scale invariant relation with an exponent in the range . As a consequence, we are able to infer aggregate socio-economic properties of ancient societies from archaeological measures of settlement organization. Our findings, from an urban settlement system that evolved independently from its old-world counterparts, suggest that principles of settlement organization are very general and may apply to the entire range of human history.

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          Predicting Maximum Tree Heights and Other Traits from Allometric Scaling and Resource Limitations

          Terrestrial vegetation plays a central role in regulating the carbon and water cycles, and adjusting planetary albedo. As such, a clear understanding and accurate characterization of vegetation dynamics is critical to understanding and modeling the broader climate system. Maximum tree height is an important feature of forest vegetation because it is directly related to the overall scale of many ecological and environmental quantities and is an important indicator for understanding several properties of plant communities, including total standing biomass and resource use. We present a model that predicts local maximal tree height across the entire continental United States, in good agreement with data. The model combines scaling laws, which encode the average, base-line behavior of many tree characteristics, with energy budgets constrained by local resource limitations, such as precipitation, temperature and solar radiation. In addition to predicting maximum tree height in an environment, our framework can be extended to predict how other tree traits, such as stomatal density, depend on these resource constraints. Furthermore, it offers predictions for the relationship between height and whole canopy albedo, which is important for understanding the Earth's radiative budget, a critical component of the climate system. Because our model focuses on dominant features, which are represented by a small set of mechanisms, it can be easily integrated into more complicated ecological or climate models.
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            Author and article information

            Contributors
            Role: Editor
            Journal
            PLoS One
            PLoS ONE
            plos
            plosone
            PLoS ONE
            Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
            1932-6203
            2014
            12 February 2014
            : 9
            : 2
            : e87902
            Affiliations
            [1 ]Department of Anthropology, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado, United States of America
            [2 ]Santa Fe Institute, Santa Fe, New Mexico, United States of America
            [3 ]Classics Department, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America
            [4 ]Department of Anthropology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico, United States of America
            University College London, United Kingdom
            Author notes

            Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

            Conceived and designed the experiments: SO AC LB. Performed the experiments: SO AC LB. Analyzed the data: SO AC LB. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: SO AC JS. Wrote the paper: SO AC LB.

            Article
            PONE-D-13-43402
            10.1371/journal.pone.0087902
            3922752
            24533062
            05ea5762-1821-4e15-80f0-3a4d716c535f
            Copyright @ 2014

            This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

            History
            : 23 October 2013
            : 30 December 2013
            Page count
            Pages: 10
            Funding
            Funded by National Science Foundation (1005075 and 103522); James S. McDonnell Foundation (220020195); John Templeton Foundation (15705); Rockefeller Foundation; Bryan J. and June B. Zwan Foundation. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
            Categories
            Research Article
            Social and Behavioral Sciences
            Anthropology
            Archaeology
            Economics
            Microeconomics
            Urban Economics
            Economic Anthropology
            Economic Development
            Geography
            Human Geography
            Central-Place Theory
            Regional Geography
            Settlement Patterns
            Sociology
            Demography
            Social Networks
            Social Theory

            Uncategorized
            Uncategorized

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