Water Management in the Southern Maya Lowlands
Part of the Water Insititutional Response to Social-Envrionmental Change: A Maya Case Study project
Author(s): Vernon L. Scarborough
Year: 1993
Summary
Examines the issue of accretionary development of cultural landscapes and the significance of reservoir-adapted water systems. It introduces the idea that the Maya, and perhaps many other semitropical civilizations, evolved in their environmental backdrop by way of a slow, additive modification of the landscape. This slow development permitted the initial flexibility necessary to accommodate the vagaries of climate, vegetation, and soils by the earliest colonizers, but it eventually culminated in a human-made environment capable of supporting extremely high population densities and a very complicated economic and political organization.
Cite this Record
Water Management in the Southern Maya Lowlands. Vernon L. Scarborough. 1993 ( tDAR id: 374788) ; doi:10.6067/XCV8ZP4494
Keywords
Culture
Maya
File Information
Name | Size | Creation Date | Date Uploaded | Access | |
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water-management-in-the-southern-maya-lowlands.pdf | 3.16mb | Feb 10, 2012 2:00:46 PM | Public |