The Village Ecodynamics Project

The late A.D. 1200s depopulation of the Mesa Verde region of the American Southwest is one of the great mysteries of American archaeology. Deserted Cliff DwellingsMany mechanisms have been proposed to account for this rapid out-migration of regional populations. Most suggest increasingly severe resource imbalances across a densely populated landscape. Some accepted research, however, shows that potential maize production was sufficient to support the estimated populations of the time. If these populations emigrated due to resource scarcity, then scarcity of other resources must have contributed to decisions to leave. On the other hand, there are hints of important changes in sociopolitical organization just prior to the depopulation.

This famous depopulation is one of the riddles that the Village Ecodynamics Project addresses. The project was undertaken to examine the interaction of simulated agrarian households with their natural environment taking in to account the production and consumption of various natural resources essential for everyday life. By evaluating the possibility of crises in factors such as potable water, woody fuels, and protein, this research will help determine whether resource factors were in fact critical in these decisions, or whether social factors may have largely influenced the exodus.

Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-2 of 2)

  • Village Ecodynamics Project I
    PROJECT Uploaded by: R. Kyle Bocinsky

    This is an archive of the Village Ecodynamics Project I (VEP I) research project.

  • Village Ecodynamics Project Settlement Model Version 5.4 (VEP I) (2006)
    DATASET Village Ecodynamics Project. Kyle Bocinsky. Tim Kohler.

    This is the Village Ecodynamics Project settlement model version 5.4, which was reported in: Kohler, Timothy A. and Mark D. Varien, eds. 2012. Emergence and Collapse of Early Villages: Models of Central Mesa Verde Archaeology. University of California Press, Berkeley, California. These data were created following the empirical Bayesian methods reported in: Ortman, Scott G., Mark D. Varien, and T. Lee Gripp. 2007. Empirical Bayesian methods for archaeological survey data: An application from...