UCSB Archaeologist Disputes Common Belief About Collapse of
Maya
Civilization
December 9, 2009
Click for downloadable image
Anabel Ford
credit: Rod Rolle
Click for downloadable image
Maya forest gardeners
credit: BRASS/El Pilar Project
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) -- For decades, the Maya -- and
their descendents -- have gotten a bad rap from archaeologists,
anthropologists, and other scholars who cite the ancient
civilization's agricultural practices for its eventual collapse. While
they agree that other factors contributed to the fall of Maya society
roughly 1,000 years ago, they claim the civilization's slash-and-burn
approach to farming caused such widespread environmental devastation
that the land simply could not sustain them.
However, research conducted by Anabel Ford, an archaeologist at
UC Santa Barbara and director of the university's MesoAmerican
Research Center, suggests the contrary may be true -- that the
forest gardens cultivated by the Maya demonstrate their great
appreciation for the environment. Her findings are published in the
current issue of the Journal of Ethnobiology in an article titled
"Origins of the Maya Forest Garden: Maya Resource
Management."
A forest garden is an unplowed, tree-dominated plot that sustains
biodiversity and animal habitat while producing plants for food,
shelter, and medicine. Tailored to the local geography, the Maya
cultivated the forest as a garden for thousands of years. Today, the
Maya forest is dominated by these useful plants, nurtured by
traditional farmers of the region who grow a wide array of food,
medicine, and spices as well as materials for construction, tools, and
utensils. Their forest gardens provide nourishment for their families,
maintain soil fertility, secure water, and clean the air.
"We conclude that the vegetation changes that took place
between 4,500 and 3,000 years ago were largely a consequence of
unstable climatic conditions," said Ford, who co-authored the
paper with Ronald Nigh, an ecological anthropologist at Centro de
Investigaciones y Estudios Superiores en Antropología Social, a
social science institute in San Cristobal, Mexico. "This climatic
chaos forced the Maya to adapt from a society of mobile
horticulturists to one of agriculture in a single location." The
result was the Maya Forest Garden, a highly productive and sustainable
form of resource management that was the foundation of the Maya
civilization from 3,000 to 1,000 years ago.
According to the paper, "shifts in the paleoecological
record, previously interpreted as evidence of the Maya denuding the
forest, can be reinterpreted as evidence of forest management in the
form of the Maya Forest garden." Climate change played a
significant role in landscape transformations, the paper continues,
"and the Maya's adaptation to climatic changes was to intensify
the forest management system developed during the preceding millennia,
a system that is still in place today."
The ancient Maya, who farmed without draft animals or plows, and
had access only to stone tools and fire, followed what Ford calls the
"milpa cycle." It is an ancient land use system by which a
closed canopy forest is transformed into an open field for annual
crops, then a managed orchard garden, and then a closed canopy forest
again. The cycle covers a time period of 12 to 24 years. A
misconception about the milpa cycle is that the fields lie fallow
after several years of annual crop cultivation. "In reality, in
the 'high-performance milpa,' fields are never abandoned, even when
they are forested," Ford explains in the article. "The milpa
cycle is a rotation of annuals with successive stages of forest
perennials during which all phases receive careful human
management.
"As a cultivated field," Ford continues in the article,
"the milpa has its own ecology of herbs, tubers, and plants that
deter pests of the main crops, enhance soil nutrients, and maintain
moisture in the soil. Even before this phase of annual crops is over,
the selection of trees and bushes for the woodland stages
begins."
"It just doesn't make sense that the Maya wouldn't take care
of the land," Ford said. "They had to maintain its quality
or they wouldn't survive. We assume that the ancient Maya must have
destroyed their environment because that's what people are doing there
today. If we're doing it, they must have as well. But the fact is,
they managed the landscape. They practiced what I call 'select and
grow.' They did not slash and burn themselves out of
existence."
She added that the present-day Maya's knowledge of forest
gardening is not formally documented in any comprehensive way.
"We could save the Maya forest garden if we could learn from
these farmers and their observance of nature," Ford said.
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