| List of Illustrations | xi |
| Acknowledgments | xv |
1 | Water, the Fundamental Resource | 1 |
| The Importance of Studying Water Management | 2 |
| The Study of Ancient Water Management | 4 |
2 | The Organizing Concepts of Water Work | 9 |
| Heterarchy versus Hierarchy | 11 |
| Accretional versus Expansionist Development | 13 |
| Economic Logics | 13 |
3 | Contemporary Thought and Recent Intellectual History | 17 |
| The Balinese Problem | 19 |
| The For-or-Against Syndrome | 19 |
| The Autonomous Water Users | 20 |
| The Subtleties of the Engineered Landscape | 21 |
| Centralization and Taxation | 24 |
| Centralization and "Centering" | 25 |
| Struggles for Terminological Rigor | 26 |
| Explicit Definitions | 26 |
| Additional Aspects of Centrality | 28 |
| Organizational Planes | 29 |
| Initial Conditions and Common Property | 30 |
| The Process of Economic Change | 33 |
| Asia and Europe | 33 |
| Africa | 35 |
| Rates, Process, and Economy | 38 |
4 | Engineering the Landscape for Water Management | 39 |
| Characteristics of Water | 39 |
| Climate and Geomorphology | 40 |
| Arid Regions | 41 |
| Humid Regions | 42 |
| Landscape Alterations | 43 |
| Wells | 43 |
| Reservoirs and Dams | 47 |
| New World | 47 |
| Old World | 54 |
| Canals | 64 |
| New World | 65 |
| Old World | 69 |
5 | Nonagricultural Aspects of Water Management | 79 |
| Transportation | 79 |
| Defense | 80 |
| Drainage and Flood Control | 82 |
| Nomadic/Sedentist Symbiosis | 82 |
| Ritual | 83 |
| Symbolic Statements | 84 |
6 | Economic Outlays and Political Risks of Water Management | 91 |
| Costs | 91 |
| Short-Term Costs | 92 |
| Long-Term Costs | 92 |
| Expansion and Contraction | 93 |
| Growing Systems | 94 |
| Declining Systems | 94 |
| Allocation | 96 |
| Still-Water versus Moving-Water Systems | 99 |
| Political Organization | 102 |
| Rural-Urban Dichotomy | 103 |
7 | Archaeological Case Studies--New World | 107 |
| Southern Maya Lowlands (400 bc-ad 900) | 108 |
| Reservoir Dependency | 110 |
| Settlement | 112 |
| Economic Outlays | 112 |
| Ritual and the Semitropical Setting | 114 |
| Highland Mexico (100 bc-ad 750) | 115 |
| Chinampa Agriculture and Settlement Patterns | 117 |
| Definitions of City | 121 |
| Economic Outlays | 123 |
| The Lowlands and Highlands Compared | 124 |
| U.S. Southwest (ad 150-1400) | 125 |
| Physical Water Management Systems | 125 |
| Political Economy and Settlement | 127 |
| World Comparisons | 129 |
8 | Archaeological Case Studies--Old World | 133 |
| North-Central Sri Lanka (ad 1-1200) | 134 |
| A Landscape of Reservoirs | 134 |
| Monumentality and Organization | 137 |
| Lower Indus Valley (2550-1900 bc) | 140 |
| The Environment and the Indus River | 140 |
| The Indus and Agricultural Intensification | 141 |
| Precipitous Development and Cultural Homogenization | 143 |
| Social Distance and Purity | 144 |
| Settlement and Economic Outlays | 145 |
| Mycenaean Greece (1500-1150 bc) | 146 |
| Historical and Environmental Background | 148 |
| Earthquakes | 150 |
| World Comparisons | 151 |
9 | Conclusions | 153 |
| Theories of the Economy and Water Use | 154 |
| Economic Practices | 158 |
| Maya Lowlands | 159 |
| Highland Mexico | 160 |
| Hohokam of the U.S. Southwest | 160 |
| North-Central Sri Lanka | 161 |
| Harappans of the Indus Valley | 162 |
| Mycenaeans of Bronze Age Greece | 163 |
| Final Overview | 163 |
| Notes | 167 |
| References | 171 |
| Index | 197 |