Examining Social Adaptations in a Volatile Landscape in Northern Mongolia via the Agent-Based Model Ger Grouper

The environment of the mountain-steppe-taiga of northern Mongolia is often characterized as marginal because of the high altitude, highly variable precipitation levels, low winter temperatures, and periodic droughts coupled with severe winter storms (known as dzuds). Despite these conditions, herder...

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Published in:Land
Main Authors: Julia Clark, Stefani Crabtree
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/land4010157
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author Julia Clark
Stefani Crabtree
author_facet Julia Clark
Stefani Crabtree
author_sort Julia Clark
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
container_issue 1
container_start_page 157
container_title Land
container_volume 4
description The environment of the mountain-steppe-taiga of northern Mongolia is often characterized as marginal because of the high altitude, highly variable precipitation levels, low winter temperatures, and periodic droughts coupled with severe winter storms (known as dzuds). Despite these conditions, herders have inhabited this landscape for thousands of years, and hunter-gatherer-fishers before that. One way in which the risks associated with such a challenging and variable landscape are mitigated is through social networks and inter-family cooperation. We present an agent-based simulation, Ger Grouper, to examine how households have mitigated these risks through cooperation. The Ger Grouper simulation takes into account locational decisions of households, looks at fission/fusion dynamics of households and how those relate to environmental pressures, and assesses how degrees of relatedness can influence sharing of resources during harsh winters. This model, coupled with the traditional archaeological and ethnographic methods, helps shed light on the links between early Mongolian pastoralist adaptations and the environment. While preliminary results are promising, it is hoped that further development of this model will be able to characterize changing land-use patterns as social and political networks developed.
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2073-445X/4/1/157/ 2025-01-17T01:03:50+00:00 Examining Social Adaptations in a Volatile Landscape in Northern Mongolia via the Agent-Based Model Ger Grouper Julia Clark Stefani Crabtree agris 2015-03-03 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/land4010157 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/land4010157 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Land; Volume 4; Issue 1; Pages: 157-181 archaeology agent-based modeling Mongolia risk-management cooperation Text 2015 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/land4010157 2023-07-31T20:42:06Z The environment of the mountain-steppe-taiga of northern Mongolia is often characterized as marginal because of the high altitude, highly variable precipitation levels, low winter temperatures, and periodic droughts coupled with severe winter storms (known as dzuds). Despite these conditions, herders have inhabited this landscape for thousands of years, and hunter-gatherer-fishers before that. One way in which the risks associated with such a challenging and variable landscape are mitigated is through social networks and inter-family cooperation. We present an agent-based simulation, Ger Grouper, to examine how households have mitigated these risks through cooperation. The Ger Grouper simulation takes into account locational decisions of households, looks at fission/fusion dynamics of households and how those relate to environmental pressures, and assesses how degrees of relatedness can influence sharing of resources during harsh winters. This model, coupled with the traditional archaeological and ethnographic methods, helps shed light on the links between early Mongolian pastoralist adaptations and the environment. While preliminary results are promising, it is hoped that further development of this model will be able to characterize changing land-use patterns as social and political networks developed. Text taiga MDPI Open Access Publishing Land 4 1 157 181
spellingShingle archaeology
agent-based modeling
Mongolia
risk-management
cooperation
Julia Clark
Stefani Crabtree
Examining Social Adaptations in a Volatile Landscape in Northern Mongolia via the Agent-Based Model Ger Grouper
title Examining Social Adaptations in a Volatile Landscape in Northern Mongolia via the Agent-Based Model Ger Grouper
title_full Examining Social Adaptations in a Volatile Landscape in Northern Mongolia via the Agent-Based Model Ger Grouper
title_fullStr Examining Social Adaptations in a Volatile Landscape in Northern Mongolia via the Agent-Based Model Ger Grouper
title_full_unstemmed Examining Social Adaptations in a Volatile Landscape in Northern Mongolia via the Agent-Based Model Ger Grouper
title_short Examining Social Adaptations in a Volatile Landscape in Northern Mongolia via the Agent-Based Model Ger Grouper
title_sort examining social adaptations in a volatile landscape in northern mongolia via the agent-based model ger grouper
topic archaeology
agent-based modeling
Mongolia
risk-management
cooperation
topic_facet archaeology
agent-based modeling
Mongolia
risk-management
cooperation
url https://doi.org/10.3390/land4010157