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Articles

Defining Suitability in Mixed Agropastoral Societies: A Case Study from Bactria in Northern Afghanistan

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Pages 372-387 | Received 10 May 2019, Accepted 19 May 2020, Published online: 06 Jun 2020
 

ABSTRACT

This paper explores the concept of suitability within applications of Ideal Distribution Models (IDMs). Specifically, we investigate the effectiveness of single measures of suitability in contexts where diverse local populations practised a range of subsistence strategies with different environmental requirements and sociocultural consequences. To do so, we draw on legacy survey data from northern Afghanistan, within the historic region of Bactria. This region of Central Asia has a rich history of nomadic pastoralism as well as dense urban settlement, with these two lifeways often occurring concurrently with complex social and economic interdependencies developing between pastoral and agricultural societies. Conceptually, we predict that such diversity should be difficult to model by conventional IDMs, as what may be defined as a low ranked habitat by one definition of suitability may be highly ranked in another. On the other hand, identifying strong deviations from IDMs may in fact indicate shifts in subsistence strategies and settlement patterns occurring across various periods of sociopolitical and cultural change. Based on our analysis, we conclude that single measures of suitability do not sufficiently model settlement patterns as predicted by IDMs but do in fact help highlight long-term processes of ecological engineering and inheritance.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Elic Weitzel and Brian Codding for inviting us to the SAA session in which this paper was first presented. We would also like to thank Warwick Ball and Anthony Lauricella for their help in obtaining the gazetteer data, and the two anonymous reviewers for the helpful feedback and suggestions.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Daniel Plekhov

Daniel Plekhov is a graduate student at the Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World at Brown University. He studies agricultural infrastructure and long-term processes of landscape modification and ecological inheritance.

Evan I. Levine

Evan I. Levine is a graduate student at the Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World at Brown University. He is a specialist in regional survey and focuses on rural religion.

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