As human societies in the pre-Neolithic period shifted from nomadic to sedentary lifestyles, their organization became more complex and hierarchical.
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For most of human history, we have foraged (hunted, fished, and collected wild plants)for food. Small nomadic groups could easily supply the necessities for their families. No one needed more, and providing for more than one's needs made little sense. The organization of such societies could be rather simple, revolving around age and gender categories. Such societies likely were largely egalitarian; beyond distinctions based on age and gender, virtually all people had equivalent rights, status, and access to resources.
Archaeologist Donald Henry suggests that the combination of a rich habitat and sedentism (permanent, year-round settlement) led to a dramatic increase in human population. In his view, nomadic, simple foragers have relatively low levels of fertility. Their high-protein, low-carbohydrate diets result in low body-fat levels, which are commonly associated with low fertility in women. High levels of physical activity and long periods of nursing, which are common among modern simple foragers, probably also contributed to low levels of female fertility if they were likewise common among ancient foragers.
In Henry's view, the adoption of a more settled existence in areas with abundant food resources would have contributed to higher fertility levels among the sedentary foragers. A diet higher in wild cereals produces proportionally more body fat, leading to higher fertility among women. Cereals, which are easy to digest, would have supplemented and then replaced mother's milk as the primary food for older infants. Since women are less fertile when they are breast-feeding, substituting cereals for mother's milk would have resulted in closer spacing of births and the potential for a greater number of live births for each woman. A more sedentary existence may also have lowered infant mortality and perhaps increased longevity among the aged. These more vulnerable members of society could safely stay in a fixed village rather than be forced regularly to move great distances as part of a nomadic existence, with its greater risk of accidents and trauma.
All of these factors may have resulted in a trend of increasing size among some local human populations in the Holocene (since 9600 B.C.E.). Given sufficient time, even in very rich habitats, human population size can reach carrying capacity, the maximum population an area can sustain within the context of a given subsistence system. And human population growth is like a runaway train: once it picks up speed, it is difficult to control. So even after reaching an area's carrying capacity, Holocene human populations probably continued to grow in food-rich regions, overshooting the ability of the territory to feed the population, again within the context of the same subsistence strategy. In some areas, small changes in climate or minor changes in plant characteristics may have further destabilized local economies.
One possible response to surpassing the carrying capacity of a region is for a group to exploit adjoining land. However, good land may itself be limited-for example, to within the confines of a river valley.Where neighbors are in the same position, having filled up the whole of the desirable habitat available in their home territories, expansion is also problematic. Impinging on the neighbors' territory can lead to conflict, especially when they too are up against the capacity of the land to provide enough food.
Another option is to stay in the same area but to shift and intensify the food quest there. The impulse to produce more food to feed a growing population was satisfied in some areas by the development of more-complex subsistence strategies involving intensive labor and requiring more cooperation and greater coordination among the increasing numbers of people. This development resulted in a change in the social and economic equations that defined those societies. Hierarchies that did not exist in earlier foraging groups but that were helpful in structuring cooperative labor and in organizing more-complex technologies probably became established, even before domestication and agriculture, as pre-Neolithic societies (before the tenth millennium B.C.E.) reacted to the population increase.
题型分类:总结题
文章结构分析:
文章题目《The Development Of Social Complexity》介绍文章的说明对象,暗示文章是按照时间顺序写的。
首段引入主题,介绍一开始的小的游牧群体。
二段介绍游牧民族存在的问题。
三段介绍定居民族的优势。
四段介绍以上定居民族的优势导致了人口爆发式的增长,甚至可能超过了土地的承载能力。
五段介绍解决人口过多的问题,要使用的解决方式:开发相邻的土地;但有可能带来冲突,新土地也会产生同样人口太多的问题。
六段介绍五段介绍解决人口过多的问题,要使用另一个的解决方式:待在旧地方,但是改变和加强这片土地的食物供应量;这最终导致了技术的发展。
引导句是对第六段后半段的概括。
选项分析:
B选项说饮食和活动的改变让人身体里脂肪含量上升,概括了第二三段的内容;
D选项说人口增长逐渐超出了环境可以承受的数量,概括了第四段;
F选项说人类社会通过发展科技来生产更多食物,概括了第六段;
A选项错,人们转向定居生活并没有在富庶的地区发生,原文未提及;
C选项错,说女人吃的食物里碳水化合物越多,身上脂肪就越多,是对的;但只是第三段的细节而非主旨,不选;
E选项错,说土地的人口承载力有限的,由于相邻人群的竞争,这个关系原文未提及。
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