essay

Age, sex, and resource transport in Venezuelan foragers

from biped to strider : the emergence of modern human walking, running, and resource transportNew York • Published In 2004 • Pages: 163-181

By: Hilton, Charles E., Greaves, Russell Dean.

Abstract
This article is a study of age and sex patterns of resource transport among the Pumé. The authors collected data on burden size and distanced carried by age and sex for 101 wet and dry season foraging trips. They found that male and female mobility patterns are affected by seasonal change and food availability. Men travel long distances across flooded savanna in the wet season to hunt game. In the dry season, fish and fowl are concentrated and easier to procure. Women travel shorter distances and carry more food in their wet season foraging for tubers, with older non-reproductive women carrying heavier loads, up to one-third their body weight, twice the burden of younger females, and five times the burden of men. Dry season forgaging of mangos requires traveling longer distances and carrying heavier loads, which can be as high as 100 pecent of body weight. While men in their subsistence activities are more far ranging, women carry heavier loads.
Subjects
Food quest
Settlement patterns
Division of labor by gender
Burden carrying
Travel
culture
Pumé
HRAF PubDate
2014
Region
South America
Sub Region
Amazon and Orinoco
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard; 2012
Field Date
1990, 1992-1993
Coverage Date
1990-1993
Coverage Place
Doro Aná, Capanaparo river region, eastern Apure, Venezuela
Notes
Charles E. Hilton and Russell D. Greaves
Includes bibliographical references (p. 179-181)
LCCN
2003060287
LCSH
Yaruro Indians