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          <dc:identifier>https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.24903</dc:identifier>
                  <dc:rights>http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/</dc:rights>
          <dc:rights>All Rights Reserved</dc:rights>
                  <dc:date>2014</dc:date>
                  <dc:format>xviii, 432 p. : ill. (some col.), maps (some col.)</dc:format>
                  <dc:type>Doctoral Dissertation</dc:type>
          <dc:type>Academic theses</dc:type>
          <dc:type>Text</dc:type>
                  <dc:language>eng</dc:language>
                  <dc:contributor>Merrill, Michael</dc:contributor>
          <dc:contributor>Hegmon, Michelle</dc:contributor>
          <dc:contributor>Anderies, John M</dc:contributor>
          <dc:contributor>Brandt, Elizabeth,</dc:contributor>
          <dc:contributor>Arizona State University</dc:contributor>
                  <dc:description>Partial requirement for: Ph.D., Arizona State University, 2014</dc:description>
          <dc:description>Includes bibliographical references (p. 278-315)</dc:description>
          <dc:description>Field of study: Anthropology</dc:description>
          <dc:description>Exchange is fundamental to human society, and anthropologists have long documented the large size and complexity of exchange systems in a range of societies. Recent work on the banking system of today&#039;s world suggests that complex exchange systems may become systemically fragile and in some types of complex exchange systems that involve feedbacks there exists a fundamental trade-off between robustness (stability) and systemic fragility. These properties may be observable in the archaeological record as well. In southern Arizona, the Hohokam system involved market-based exchange of large quantities of goods (including corn, pottery, stone, and shell) across southern Arizona and beyond, but after a few generations of expansion it collapsed rapidly around A.D. 1070. In this case, increasing the scale of a pre-existing system (i.e., expanding beyond the Hohokam region) may have reduced the efficacy of established robustness-fragility trade-offs, which, in turn, amplified the fragility of the system, increasing its risk of collapse. My research examines (1) the structural and organizational properties of a transregional system of shell exchange between the Hohokam region and California, and (2) the effect of the presence and loss of a very large freshwater lake (Lake Cahuilla) in southeastern California on the stability of the Hohokam system. I address these issues with analysis of ethnographic, ethnohistoric, and archaeological data, and with mathematical modeling. My study (1) produced a simple network model of a transregional system of interaction that links the Hohokam region and California during the centuries from A.D. 700 to 1100; (2) uses network and statistical analysis of the network model and archaeological data to strongly suggest that the transregional exchange system existed and was directional and structured; (3) uses network and other analysis to identify robustness-fragility properties of the transregional system and to show that trade between Lake Cahuilla fishers and the Hohokam system should be included in a mathematical model of this system; and (4) develops and analyzes a mathematical model of renewable resource use and trade that provides important insights into the robustness and systemic fragility of the Hohokam system (A.D. 900-1100).</dc:description>
                  <dc:subject>Archaeology</dc:subject>
          <dc:subject>Hohokam culture</dc:subject>
          <dc:subject>Social archaeology</dc:subject>
          <dc:subject>Indians of North America--Commerce.</dc:subject>
          <dc:subject>Indians of North America--Antiquities.</dc:subject>
                  <dc:title>Increasing scales of social interaction and the role of Lake Cahuilla in the systemic fragility of the Hohokam system (A.D. 700-1100)</dc:title></oai_dc:dc></metadata></record></GetRecord></OAI-PMH>
