1. Risk of resource failure and toolkit variation in small-scale farmers and herders
- Author
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April Ruttle, Michael J. O'Brien, Briggs Buchanan, and Mark Collard
- Subjects
Risk ,Computer science ,Economics ,lcsh:Medicine ,Ethnoarchaeology ,Social and Behavioral Sciences ,Resource (project management) ,Paleoanthropology ,health services administration ,Humans ,0601 history and archaeology ,natural sciences ,Economic Anthropology ,lcsh:Science ,Biology ,2. Zero hunger ,Agricultural irrigation ,Evolutionary Biology ,Economic History ,060101 anthropology ,Multidisciplinary ,Actuarial science ,060102 archaeology ,Tool Use Behavior ,Ecology ,lcsh:R ,Linear model ,Regression analysis ,Agriculture ,06 humanities and the arts ,Biological Anthropology ,Variation (linguistics) ,Work (electrical) ,Archaeology ,Scale (social sciences) ,Anthropology ,Linear Models ,lcsh:Q ,Physical Anthropology ,human activities ,Diversity (business) ,Research Article - Abstract
Recent work suggests that global variation in toolkit structure among hunter-gatherers is driven by risk of resource failure such that as risk of resource failure increases, toolkits become more diverse and complex. Here we report a study in which we investigated whether the toolkits of small-scale farmers and herders are influenced by risk of resource failure in the same way. In the study, we applied simple linear and multiple regression analysis to data from 45 small-scale food-producing groups to test the risk hypothesis. Our results were not consistent with the hypothesis; none of the risk variables we examined had a significant impact on toolkit diversity or on toolkit complexity. It appears, therefore, that the drivers of toolkit structure differ between hunter-gatherers and small-scale food-producers.
- Published
- 2012