Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- 1 Introduction: cultural responses to risk and uncertainty
- 2 The spirit of survival: cultural responses to resource variability in North Alaska
- 3 Saving it for later: storage by prehistoric hunter–gatherers in Europe
- 4 The role of wild resources in small-scale agricultural systems: tales from the Lakes and the Plains
- 5 The economy has a normal surplus: economic stability and social change among early farming communities of Thessaly, Greece
- 6 Changing responses to drought among the Wodaabe of Niger
- 7 Of grandfathers and grand theories: the hierarchised ordering of responses to hazard in a Greek rural community
- 8 Risk and the polis: the evolution of institutionalised responses to food supply problems in the ancient Greek state
- 9 Monitoring interannual variability: an example from the period of early state development in southwestern Iran
- 10 Public intervention in the food supply in pre-industrial Europe
- 11 Conclusion: bad year economics
- References
- Index
- ALSO IN THIS SERIES
9 - Monitoring interannual variability: an example from the period of early state development in southwestern Iran
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- 1 Introduction: cultural responses to risk and uncertainty
- 2 The spirit of survival: cultural responses to resource variability in North Alaska
- 3 Saving it for later: storage by prehistoric hunter–gatherers in Europe
- 4 The role of wild resources in small-scale agricultural systems: tales from the Lakes and the Plains
- 5 The economy has a normal surplus: economic stability and social change among early farming communities of Thessaly, Greece
- 6 Changing responses to drought among the Wodaabe of Niger
- 7 Of grandfathers and grand theories: the hierarchised ordering of responses to hazard in a Greek rural community
- 8 Risk and the polis: the evolution of institutionalised responses to food supply problems in the ancient Greek state
- 9 Monitoring interannual variability: an example from the period of early state development in southwestern Iran
- 10 Public intervention in the food supply in pre-industrial Europe
- 11 Conclusion: bad year economics
- References
- Index
- ALSO IN THIS SERIES
Summary
This brief paper presents an example of a refuse-filled pit from a rural settlement of the Middle Uruk Period (mid-fourth millennium bc) in south-western Iran, to illustrate the importance of, and potential for, recovering very fine-grained temporal evidence from the archaeological record. The pit provides evidence of seasonal variation in production, consumption and administration. This information is used, in turn, to document the differing responses to successive good and bad years by the rural community.
Evaluating explanations of complex cultural processes often demands precise differentiation of temporal sequences of years, of seasons and – when we seek to utilise the remains of social, ritual or military action – even finer-grained event sequences. It is thus surprising that archaeologists interested in process still fail to analyse, or even to recover, such data. In fact, most archaeological records present opportunities to isolate samples deposited in short spans of time, and the techniques available for ascribing them to specific seasons or years are becoming more diverse all the time.
The Susiana Plain region is an eastward extension of the steppe and alluvial desert environments of Mesopotamia proper. This plain contains more than 1400 km2 of well-drained cultivable soils; during the early periods discussed here, before the three major rivers of the plain entrenched their beds, much of this area could be irrigated with small canals.
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- Information
- Bad Year EconomicsCultural Responses to Risk and Uncertainty, pp. 106 - 113Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1989
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