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Factors Controlling Pre-Columbian and Early Historic Maize Productivity in the American Southwest, Part 1: The Southern Colorado Plateau and Rio Grande Regions

Dates

Year
2011

Citation

Benson, Larry V, 2011, Factors Controlling Pre-Columbian and Early Historic Maize Productivity in the American Southwest, Part 1: The Southern Colorado Plateau and Rio Grande Regions: Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory, v. 18, iss. 1, p. 1-60.

Summary

Maize is the New World’s preeminent grain crop and it provided the economic basis for human culture in many regions within the Americas. To flourish, maize needs water, sunlight (heat), and nutrients (e.g., nitrogen). In this paper, climate and soil chemistry data are used to evaluate the potential for dryland (rain-on-field) agriculture in the semiarid southeastern Colorado Plateau and Rio Grande regions. Processes that impact maize agriculture such as nitrogen mineralization, infiltration of precipitation, bare soil evaporation, and transpiration are discussed and evaluated. Most of the study area, excepting high-elevation regions, receives sufficient solar radiation to grow maize. The salinities of subsurface soils in the central [...]

Contacts

Author :
Benson, Larry V

Attached Files

Communities

  • USGS National Research Program

Tags

Provenance

Added to ScienceBase on Mon Apr 22 12:37:19 MDT 2013 by processing file <b>Former Project Tropical and Arid Regions Climate.xml</b> in item <a href="https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/504216b9e4b04b508bfd337b">https://www.sciencebase.gov/catalog/item/504216b9e4b04b508bfd337b</a>

Additional Information

Identifiers

Type Scheme Key
DOI http://sciencebase.gov/vocab/identifierScheme 10.1007/s10816-010-9082-z

Citation Extension

citationTypeJournal Article
journalJournal of Archaeological Method and Theory
parts
typePages
value1-60
typeVolume
value18
typeIssue
value1

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