A distribution analysis of the central Maya lowlands ecoinformation network: its rises, falls, and changes

We report a study of central Maya lowland dynastic information networks, i.e., six cities’ external elite ceramic influences, and how they reflect the decision-making practices of Maya elites over 3000 years. Forest cover, i.e., Moraceae family pollen, was added to the network analysis to provide ecological boundary conditions, thus ecologically moderated information networks. Principal components analysis revealed three dominant patterns. First, the networking of interior cities into powerful polities in the Late Preclassic and Classic periods (400 BCE-800 CE). In a second pattern, coastal cities emerged as key entrepôts based on marine navigation (Terminal and Postclassic periods, 800-1500 CE). Climate dynamics and sustainability considerations facilitated the transition. Forest cover, a measure of ecosystem health, shows interior forests diminished as interior cities networked but rebounded as their networks declined. By contrast, coastal forests flourished with networks implying that the marine-based economy was sustainable. Third, in the Classic, the network-dominant coast, west or east, changed with interior polities’ political struggles, the critical transition occurring after 695 CE as Tikal gained dominance over the Calakmul-Caracol alliance. Beginning with the Late Preclassic about 2000 years ago, it is possible to assign names to the decision makers by referencing the growing literature on written Maya records. Although the detectable decision sequence evident in this analysis is very basic, we believe it does open possible avenues to much deeper understanding as the study proceeds into the future. The Integrated History and Future of People on Earth–Maya working group that sponsored the analysis anticipates that it will provide actionable social science intelligence for future decision making at the global scale.

[1]  E. Durkheim Suicide: A Study in Sociology , 1897 .

[2]  R. Redfield,et al.  Chan Kom a Maya Village , 1934 .

[3]  J. Sartre Man makes Himself , 1936, Nature.

[4]  Loa P. Traxler,et al.  The Ancient Maya , 1947 .

[5]  R. Rummel Applied Factor Analysis , 1970 .

[6]  D. Raphael,et al.  I: The Theory of Moral Sentiments , 1976 .

[7]  J. Kerr The Maya vase book : a corpus of rollout photographs of Maya vases , 1989 .

[8]  Linda Schele,et al.  A Forest of Kings: The Untold Story of the Ancient Maya , 1990 .

[9]  Dorie Reents-Budet,et al.  Painting the Maya Universe: Royal Ceramics of the Classic Period , 1994 .

[10]  J. Gunn,et al.  A landscape analysis of the candelaria watershed in mexico: Insights into paleoclimates affecting upland horticulture in the southern yucatan peninsula semi-karst , 1995 .

[11]  D. Hodell,et al.  Possible role of climate in the collapse of Classic Maya civilization , 1995, Nature.

[12]  S. Kauffman At Home in the Universe: The Search for the Laws of Self-Organization and Complexity , 1995 .

[13]  J. Negrete,et al.  A Dynastic Tomb from Campeche, Mexico: New Evidence on Jaguar Paw, a Ruler of Calakmul , 1999, Latin American Antiquity.

[14]  L. E. Leidy,et al.  Guns, germs and steel: The fates of human societies , 1999 .

[15]  Simon Martin,et al.  Chronicle of the Maya Kings and Queens: Deciphering the Dynasties of the Ancient Maya , 2000 .

[16]  R. Gill The great Maya droughts : water, life, and death , 2001 .

[17]  J. Gunn,et al.  BAJO SEDIMENTS AND THE HYDRAULIC SYSTEM OF CALAKMUL, CAMPECHE, MEXICO , 2002, Ancient Mesoamerica.

[18]  F. Capra The hidden connections : integrating the biological, cognitive, and social dimensions of life into a science of sustainability , 2002 .

[19]  T. Allen,et al.  Resource Transitions and Energy Gain: Contexts of Organization , 2003 .

[20]  M. Hansen,et al.  A Comparative Study of Thirty City-State Cultures , 2003 .

[21]  Vernon L. Scarborough,et al.  Heterarchy, political economy, and the ancient Maya : the Three Rivers Region of the east-central Yucatán Peninsula , 2003 .

[22]  M. Allen,et al.  Paleolimnological approaches for inferring past climate change in the Maya Region: recent advances and methodological limitations. , 2003 .

[23]  Chiara Sabatti,et al.  Network component analysis: Reconstruction of regulatory signals in biological systems , 2003, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.

[24]  George L. Cowgill,et al.  ORIGINS AND DEVELOPMENT OF URBANISM: Archaeological Perspectives , 2004 .

[25]  P. Rice,et al.  The Terminal Classic in the Maya Lowlands: Collapse, Transition, and Transformation , 2004 .

[26]  J. Diamond Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed , 2005 .

[27]  de Martinez Murals and the Development of Merchant Activity at Chichen Itza , 2005 .

[28]  Joseph A. Tainter,et al.  Climate, Complexity, and Problem Solving in the Roman Empire , 2007 .

[29]  J. Sabloff It depends on how we look at things: New perspectives on the postclassic period in the northern maya lowlands , 2007 .

[30]  J. Gunn,et al.  Emergence of complex societies after sea level stabilized , 2007 .

[31]  Matthew A. Peeples,et al.  Social Transformation and Its Human Costs in the Prehispanic U.S. Southwest , 2008 .

[32]  K. A. Pyburn Pomp and Circumstance Before Belize: Ancient Maya Commerce and the New River Conurbation , 2008 .

[33]  Anita Guerrini,et al.  Sustainability or Collapse? An Integrated History and Future of People on Earth , 2009 .

[34]  M. Hellermann The End of Food , 2009 .

[35]  V. Scarborough,et al.  An Alternative Order: The Dualistic Economies of the Ancient Maya , 2009, Latin American Antiquity.

[36]  Melanie Mitchell,et al.  Complexity - A Guided Tour , 2009 .

[37]  R. Nigh,et al.  Origins of the Maya Forest Garden: Maya Resource Management , 2009 .

[38]  V. Scarborough,et al.  Complexity and Sustainability: Perspectives from the Ancient Maya and the Modern Balinese , 2010, American Antiquity.

[39]  F. Fukuyama The Origins of Political Order: From Prehuman Times to the French Revolution , 2011 .

[40]  Arlen F. Chase,et al.  Airborne LiDAR, archaeology, and the ancient Maya landscape at Caracol, Belize , 2011 .

[41]  Arlen F. Chase,et al.  Status and Power: Caracol, Teotihuacan, and the Early Classic Maya World , 2011 .

[42]  Mark Golitko,et al.  Complexities of collapse: the evidence of Maya obsidian as revealed by social network graphical analysis , 2012, Antiquity.

[43]  Marilyn A. Masson,et al.  An argument for Classic era Maya market exchange , 2012 .

[44]  Jeremy A. Sabloff,et al.  Classic Period collapse of the Central Maya Lowlands: Insights about human–environment relationships for sustainability , 2012, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[45]  V. Scarborough,et al.  A TALE OF TWO COLLAPSES: ENVIRONMENTAL VARIABILITY AND CULTURAL DISRUPTION IN THE MAYA LOWLANDS , 2013 .

[46]  Arlen F. Chase,et al.  1 Diversity, Resiliency, and IHOPE‐Maya: Using the Past to Inform the Present , 2014 .

[47]  V. Scarborough,et al.  9 The Alternative Economy: Resilience in the Face of Complexity from the Eastern Lowlands , 2014 .

[48]  Jeffrey T. Morisette,et al.  Integrating research tools to support the management of social-ecological systems under climate change , 2014 .

[49]  John F. Weishampel,et al.  Quantifying Ancient Maya Land Use Legacy Effects on Contemporary Rainforest Canopy Structure , 2014, Remote. Sens..

[50]  Gyles Iannone The Great Maya Droughts in Cultural Context: Case Studies in Resilience and Vulnerability , 2014 .

[51]  J. Gunn,et al.  8 Calakmul: Agent Risk and Sustainability in the Western Maya Lowlands , 2014 .

[52]  Arlen F. Chase The Resilience and Vulnerability of Ancient Landscapes: Transforming Maya Archaeology through IHOPE , 2014 .

[53]  Arlen F. Chase,et al.  Tropical landscapes and the Ancient Maya: Diversity in time and space , 2014 .

[54]  Arlen F. Chase,et al.  10 Path Dependency in the Rise and Denouement of a Classic Maya City: The Case of Caracol, Belize , 2014 .

[55]  V. Scarborough,et al.  Forests, fields, and the edge of sustainability at the ancient Maya city of Tikal , 2014, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[56]  B. Cook,et al.  Unprecedented 21st century drought risk in the American Southwest and Central Plains , 2015, Science Advances.

[57]  Robert Costanza,et al.  Growing the Ancient Maya Social-Ecological System from the Bottom Up , 2016 .

[58]  G. Islebe,et al.  Holocene paleoecology, climate history and human influence in the southwestern Yucatan Peninsula , 2015 .

[59]  J. Larson,et al.  An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations , 2015 .

[60]  M. Canuto,et al.  Drought, agricultural adaptation, and sociopolitical collapse in the Maya Lowlands , 2015, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[61]  Arlen F. Chase,et al.  The Ancient Maya City: Anthropogenic Landscapes, Settlement Archaeology, and Caracol, Belize , 2016 .

[62]  Kenneth S. Hicks Political Order and Political Decay: From the Industrial Revolution to the Globalization Of Democracy , 2016 .

[63]  Tobias Faust,et al.  Reading The Maya Glyphs , 2016 .

[64]  The Political Geography of Long-Distance Trade in the Maya Lowlands: Comparing Proxies for Power Structure and Exchange Networks , 2016 .

[65]  Julie A. Hoggarth,et al.  A New Radiocarbon Sequence from Lamanai, Belize: Two Bayesian Models from One of Mesoamerica’s Most Enduring Sites , 2016, Radiocarbon.

[66]  C. Hall,et al.  America’s Most Sustainable Cities and Regions: Surviving the 21st Century Megatrends , 2016 .

[67]  J. Sabloff,et al.  Leaving Classic Maya Cities: Agent-Based Modeling and the Dynamics of Diaspora , 2016 .

[68]  Adrian S Z Chase Beyond elite control: residential reservoirs at Caracol, Belize , 2016 .

[69]  Social Theory in Archaeology and Ancient History: The Present and Future of Counternarratives , 2016 .

[70]  Ulrich Eggers,et al.  Emergence From Chaos To Order , 2016 .

[71]  Johnathan Rush,et al.  Exploration and exploitation in the macrohistory of the pre-Hispanic Pueblo Southwest , 2016, Science Advances.

[72]  J. Weishampel,et al.  Using Lidar and GIS to Investigate Water and Soil Management in the Agricultural Terracing at Caracol, Belize , 2016, Advances in Archaeological Practice.

[73]  J. Boardman 1177 B.C.: The Year Civilization Collapsed , 2017 .

[74]  W. Ruddiman,et al.  Plows, Plagues, and Petroleum , 2010 .

[75]  E. Durkheim FROM THE DIVISION OF LABOR IN SOCIETY , 2019, The New Economic Sociology.