Modeling Agricultural Production Strategies in the Northern Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico

Diversification in agricultural techniques is a common strategy of risk minimization in nonindustrial societies. However, attribution of suboptimal behavior to risk minimization without consideration of the structure of risk and its environmental context obscures the complexity of agricultural decis...

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Published inHuman ecology : an interdisciplinary journal Vol. 26; no. 3; pp. 469 - 487
Main Authors Cynthia L. Herhahn, Hill, J. Brett
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Dordrecht Plenum Publishing Corporation 01.09.1998
Kluwer Academic Publishers Group
Springer Nature B.V
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Summary:Diversification in agricultural techniques is a common strategy of risk minimization in nonindustrial societies. However, attribution of suboptimal behavior to risk minimization without consideration of the structure of risk and its environmental context obscures the complexity of agricultural decision-making. The productive potential of a prehistoric agricultural system that includes flood-water and dry farming and stream irrigation is modeled using Geographic Information System (GIS) analysis to evaluate whether diversification occurred as a response to population pressure or as a risk buffering strategy. The estimated productive potential of floodwater and irrigation farming is sufficient to have supported the estimated local population, suggesting that risk buffering is a more likely explanation. Floodwater farming and stream irrigation form a dual strategy that is effective at reducing risk. However, the potential of dry farming for subsistence production is insufficient for buffering more than a 2% productive shortfall. We propose that, within this generally risk-averse economy, dry farming was oriented toward the production of nonsubsistence crops such as cotton.
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ISSN:0300-7839
1572-9915
DOI:10.1023/A:1018760316892