Santa Fe Institute Collaboration Platform

COMPLEX TIME: Adaptation, Aging, & Arrow of Time

Get Involved!
Contact: Caitlin Lorraine McShea, Program Manager, cmcshea@santafe.edu

Difference between revisions of "Population and prehistory II: Space-limited human populations in constant environments."

From Complex Time
(Created page with "{{Reference Material |Meeting=Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Co-evolution of population and environment - environment, foo...")
 
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{Reference Material
 
{{Reference Material
|Meeting=Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics/Co-evolution of population and environment - environment, food supply & demography
+
|Meeting=Population and the Environment: Analytical Demography and Applied Population Ethics
 +
|Added by=CharlotteLee
 
|title=Population and prehistory II:  Space-limited human populations in constant environments.
 
|title=Population and prehistory II:  Space-limited human populations in constant environments.
 
|authors=Puleston, C.; Tuljapurkar, S.
 
|authors=Puleston, C.; Tuljapurkar, S.

Latest revision as of 21:40, January 20, 2019

Category
General Reference
author-supplied keywords
keywords
authors
Puleston, C.
Tuljapurkar, S.
title
Population and prehistory II: Space-limited human populations in constant environments.
type
journal
year
2008
source
Theoretical Population Biology
pages
147-160
volume
74
issue
2

Abstract

We present a population model to examine the forces that determined the quality and quantity of human life in early agricultural societies where cultivable area is limited. The model is driven by the non-linear and interdependent relationships between the age distribution of a population, its behavior and technology, and the nature of its environment. The common currency in the model is the production of food, on which age-specific rates of birth and death depend. There is a single non-trivial equilibrium population at which productivity balances caloric needs. One of the most powerful controls on equilibrium hunger level is fertility control. Gains against hunger are accompanied by decreases in population size. Increasing worker productivity does increase equilibrium population size but does not improve welfare at equilibrium. As a case study we apply the model to the population of a Polynesian valley before European contact.

Counts

Citation count From Scopus. Refreshed every 5 days.
Page views
7

Identifiers

Add a file