sedentism
English
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editNoun
editsedentism (uncountable)
- (anthropology) The practice of living in one place for a long time.
- 1982, Eric S. Higgs, M. R. Jarman, Early European Agriculture: Its Foundation and Development, page 46:
- Where sedentism does occur amongst hunters and gatherers it seems generally to be related to a number of recurrent features.
- 2012, Thomas E. Emerson, Dale L. McElrath, Andrew C. Fortier, Archaic Societies, page 30:
- The implicit correlations between mobility, sedentism, complexity, and progressive evolutionary change are so interwoven and all pervasive as to be all but impossible to disentangle in adaptationist theory.
- 2023, Gregory K. Dow, Clyde G. Reed, Economic Prehistory: Six Transitions That Shaped The World, page 116:
- Assuming sedentism made children less costly, as is often said to be true, our theory predicts a shift toward increased fertility, increased child mortality, decreased food per capita, and increased regional population.
- Coordinate term: nomadism
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