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6 - Late Colonial Watersheds

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 October 2021

Richard M. Conway
Affiliation:
Montclair State University, New Jersey
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Summary

The sixth chapter examines how Native communities and haciendas adopted livestock rearing and, in particular, cattle ranching as a new economic activity within the lakes. Responding to the rise of the urban market for meat as well as the demographic decline within Native communities, residents of the chinampa districts expanded into the waters of the lakes in new and destabilizing ways. Alongside the chinampas, many of which survived and retained their value, haciendas and Native communities now fashioned pastures from the swamps. As they pushed further into the lake, pastoralists instituted new environmental management practices and constructed new hydraulic engineering works of their own. At the same time, the colonial administration, responding to renewed fears of flooding in the capital, increasingly intervened in the southern lakes’ hydrology. These new forces for change, when combined with higher rates of rainfall because of renewed climate extremes, undermined both the ecological autonomy and the flood defenses of the Nahua communities, portending of wholesale environmental transformation if not ruination on the eve of Mexico’s Independence.

Type
Chapter
Information
Islands in the Lake
Environment and Ethnohistory in Xochimilco, New Spain
, pp. 273 - 309
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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