2021
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0252532
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Local economies and household spacing in early chiefdom communities

Abstract: Archaeological research has by now revealed a great deal of variation in the way early complex societies, or chiefdoms, developed. This variation is widely recognized, but our understanding of the forces that produced it remains relatively undeveloped. This paper takes aim at such understanding by exploring variation in the local economies of six early chiefdoms; it considers what implications this variation had for trajectories of chiefdom development, as well as the source of that variation. Economic exchang… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…In terms of formalization and quantification, the scaling research represents a notable development in research on ancient generative processes. The finding of the predicted quantitative results for a variety of ancient settlement systems demonstrates that agglomeration economies were present in the past, and that the fundamental generative processes of settlements-such as movement and social interactions-go back thousands of years in time (Berrey, et al, 2021, Smith, 2023.…”
Section: Self-coordinationmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…In terms of formalization and quantification, the scaling research represents a notable development in research on ancient generative processes. The finding of the predicted quantitative results for a variety of ancient settlement systems demonstrates that agglomeration economies were present in the past, and that the fundamental generative processes of settlements-such as movement and social interactions-go back thousands of years in time (Berrey, et al, 2021, Smith, 2023.…”
Section: Self-coordinationmentioning
confidence: 97%