"Their towns are commonly small... near the water side... The ground about them is cleared, and where it is not, they fell the trees, save only those which they leave for shade... They plant their corn, beans, and pumpkins together in the same field, which they call their garden... Thus, by their industry, they draw from the earth a plentiful sustenance without the need of keeping herds of cattle or clearing vast tracts of forest."
— Thomas Hariot, *A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia*, 1588
Which of the following historical developments of the pre-contact period is best illustrated by the agricultural practices described in the excerpt?
- AThe integration of European livestock and domesticated draft animals to increase crop yields
- BThe adoption of a highly mobile lifestyle across all North American regions due to a shared reliance on hunting large game
- The reliance on localized forest management and multi-crop agriculture to support semi-permanent villagesCevap
- DThe transition of Eastern Woodlands communities to labor systems structured around the Spanish encomienda model
Cevap
The reliance on localized forest management and multi-crop agriculture to support semi-permanent villages
The correct answer is correct because the agricultural practices described (clearing forests and growing corn, beans, and pumpkins together) reflect the mixed agricultural and hunter-gatherer systems of the Northeast and Atlantic Seaboard. These methods allowed societies in these regions to establish semi-permanent villages and adapt to their specific woodland environments without relying on domesticated livestock.
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Anahtar Kavram
Indigenous Societies and Diverse Environments
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