Overview
The
Village Project is designed to help archaeologists understand
the factors influencing settlement patterns of small-scale agrarian
peoples. Although such societies are becoming increasingly rare, they
represent the norm throughout most of the Neolithic period the world
over.
This
project uses computer simulation in the form of agent-based modeling
(ABM) to investigate where prehistoric people of the American Southwest
would have situated their households based on both the natural and social
environments in which they lived. The model is developed using the Swarm
multi-agent simulation libraries, developed through the Santa Fe Institute
and now offered as a public service by the Swarm
Development Group. An overview of simulation in archaeology is presented
in a recent popular magazine article by Kohler,
Gumerman, and Reynolds 2005.
We seek
to understand general processes in the particular (though changing)
environments of southwestern Colorado between A.D. 600 and A.D. 1300.
This emphasis on realism is in contrast to much agent-based modeling
in the social sciences, which has typically put a premium on generality.
Agent-based models not only provide us a platform through which the
archaeologists, hydrologists, computer scientists, and economists associated
with this project can interact (see Personnel)
but allow us to study a system which is characterized by high degrees
of interaction between the landscape as it was affected by climate change
and by the actions of farmers, and among the farmers themselves, as
they sought to make a living in this marginal farming area.
This project
extends earlier research reported by Kohler
et al. 2000 that investigated what models for locational behavior
at the household level would best replicate the Pueblo
II and Pueblo III settlement
systems as they were understood in the late 1990s. We are now working
with Crow Canyon
Archaeological Center to map the known sites in our study
area back to A.D. 600, to estimate the number of households living
at each of these sites, and to estimate as precisely as possible the
dates for those occupations. We have been presenting our preliminary
findings in symposia at the Society for American Archaeology meetings
and many other venues since 2002. To view a selection of these papers
click here.
Our
website is published to offer users a broad overview of the project,
its history, the people involved, information on similar research and
links to further information. We welcome questions
and feedback.

Project
Progress Reports
Agent-based modeling
in the social sciences

Paleoenvironmental
Reconstruction