Climate Variability, Drought, and the Belief that High Gods Are Associated with Weather in Nonindustrial Societies
Weather, Climate, and Society • Vol/Iss. 13(2) • American Meteorological Society • Boston • Published In • Pages: 259-272 •
By Ember, Carol R., Skoggard, Ian, Felzer, Benjamin, Pitek, Emily, Jiang, Mingkai
Hypothesis
There will be a correlation between dry climates and resource stress.
Note
Both dry and wet predictability factors were mostly uncorrelated with resource stress measures or were only marginally significant, with r values for dry ranging from -0.20-0.28 and r values for wet (reverse coded) ranging from -0.20 to -0.02. Wet climates were significantly associated with less resource stress. The variable most consistently significant was "Low Plant and Animal Richness." Low richness is predicted by dry climate, whereas wet climates predict high richness.
Test Name | Support | Significance | Coefficient | Tail |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pearson's r | Partially supported | p<0.05 | r=0.34 | Two-tailed |
Variable Name | Variable Type | OCM Term(s) |
---|---|---|
Famine | Dependent | Diet, Disasters, Gratification And Control Of Hunger, Nutrition |
Resource Stress | Dependent | Diet, Disasters, Gratification And Control Of Hunger, Nutrition |
Dry Factor | Independent | Climate |
Chronic Scarcity | Dependent | Diet, Disasters, Gratification And Control Of Hunger, Nutrition |
Natural Hazards | Dependent | Diet, Disasters, Gratification And Control Of Hunger, Nutrition |
Low Plant and Animal Richness | Dependent | Fauna, Flora |