What to Do with "Megasites" in Prehistory? Further Exploring the "Megasite" Conundrum
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 82nd Annual Meeting, Vancouver, BC (2017)
Periodically in the prehistory of human settlement very large sites have appeared which challenge our assumptions about settlement categories. Such sites, including Chaco Canyon, the Trypillia megasites, Bigo, Taosi and Co Loa, are often characterized as urban, proto-urban, pre-urban or not urban. However, even when making allowances for regional variation in urban form, these sites are anomalous. Roland Fletcher has argued that they might usefully be considered as examples of a unique trajectory of growth towards extensive dispersed settlement forms, complementary to but different from the trajectory of low-density agrarian urbanism and the recent trajectory towards dispersed industrial urbanism. A session at the SAA conference in 2013 explored the characteristics of some salient examples of these settlements, including the European Iron Age Oppida, Cahokia and Great Zimbabwe. This session will include additional regions and time periods, particularly in Africa, South America, the southwest USA and Asia and extend the discussion of how to theorize them. A consideration of these sites as comparable phenomena has the potential to transform our models of settlement growth, give new significance to regional culture histories, and perhaps have implications for our urban future.
Other Keywords
Urbanism •
settlement •
Settlement Pattern •
Central Places •
Urbanization •
Location •
Gis •
Population History •
Monumental Architecture •
Ceremonial Architecture
Geographic Keywords
Republic of Turkey (Country) •
Republic of Armenia (Country) •
Georgia (Country) •
Kingdom of Sweden (Country) •
Kingdom of Norway (Country) •
French Republic (Country) •
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Nort (Country) •
Ireland (Country) •
Isle of Man (Country) •
Kingdom of Belgium (Country)
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-10 of 10)
- Documents (10)
- Apples and Oranges? Positioning Regional Archaeology in a Global Perspective (2017)
- Corneşti-Iarcuri:ten years of research at the largest prehistoric site in Europe. (2017)
- Early cities or large villages?: settlement dynamics in the Trypillia group, Ukraine (2017)
- The emergence of the Bel'sk settlement complex:landscape, population histories, and social structure (2017)
- Evidence for complex society at Middle Preclassic La Venta settlements (2017)
- Large Walled Sites on the Chengdu Plain, Sichuan, China: Shifting Centers of Regional Emphasis (2017)
- Longevity and authority in a mobile world the megasites of the Ugandan grasslands (2017)
- Mesopotamian Megasites before Uruk (2017)
- Re-Evaluating the Case for America’s First Cities: evidence from the Norte Chico region of Peru (2017)
- Variation in Large Sites from the Longshan Period of Northern China (2017)