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      Early Agriculture in the Maya Lowlands

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          Abstract

          Wetland research in northern Belize provides the earliest evidence for development of agriculture in the Maya Lowlands. Pollen data confirm the introduction of maize and manioc before 3000 B.C. Dramatic deforestation, beginning ca. 2500 B.C. and intensifying in wetland environments ca. 1500-1300 B.C., marks an expansion of agriculture, which occurred in the context of a mixed foraging economy. By 1000 B.C. a rise in groundwater levels led farmers to construct drainage ditches coeval with the emergence of Maya complex society ca. 1000-400 B.C. Field manipulations often involved minor modifications of natural hummocks. Canal systems are not as extensive in northern Belize as previously reported, nor is there evidence of artificially raised planting platforms. By the Classic period, wetland fields were flooded and mostly abandoned.

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          Visualization of an Oxygen-deficient Bottom Water Circulation in Osaka Bay, Japan

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            Nimrods, piscators, pluckers, and planters: The emergence of food production

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              A Simplified Approach to Calibrating 14C Dates

              We propose a simplified approach to the calibration of radiocarbon dates. We use splines through the tree-ring data as calibration curves, thereby eliminating a large part of the statistical scatter of the actual data points. To express the age range, we transform the ± 1 σ and ± 2 σ values of the BP age to calendar dates and interpret them as the 68% and 95% confidence intervals. This approach bypasses the conceptual problems of the transfer of individual probability values from the radiocarbon to the calendar age. We have adapted software to make this calibration possible.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                Latin American Antiquity
                Latin Am. antiq.
                JSTOR
                1045-6635
                2325-5080
                December 1996
                January 2017
                : 7
                : 04
                : 355-372
                Article
                10.2307/972264
                5ac12b30-9897-4a52-b9ee-7820e4282fbd
                © 1996
                History

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