TITLE:
A Comparative Study of Settlement Forms and Environmental Adaptation in Venusia and the Lowland Maya
AUTHORS:
Xiangyi Li
KEYWORDS:
Settlement Archaeology, Environmental Adaptation, GIS and Lidar, Roman Colonization, Maya Urbanism
JOURNAL NAME:
Archaeological Discovery,
Vol.14 No.1,
January
15,
2026
ABSTRACT: Settlement morphological and environmental adaptation are also the core aspects of human-environment relationships; nevertheless, cross-cultural comparative research regarding the ways various civilizations structured space and adapted to ecological limitations are still very few. This study fills this gap by conducting a comparative study of two very different civilizations that existed in the world on very different grounds: the Roman colonial city of Venusia in southern Italy (founded 291 BC) and the lowland Maya civilization of Central America (peak 250 - 900 AD). This paper is a reconstruction of Mediterranean and tropical settlement patterns and environmental adaptation methods using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) technology. The comparison shows that there were some fundamental differences in the urban structure: Venusia was characterized by centralized compact urbanism, orthogonality in planning, a hierarchy of three settlement tiers, and a government-led infrastructure, whereas the Maya were characterized by dispersed low-density urbanism, organic settlement patterns determined by water availability, and competitive multi-centered political structure. Correspondingly, strategies of environmental adaptation had diverged: Venusia used an institutional model of adaptation which entailed top-down coordination of the state to mobilize the engineering capacity to build aqueducts and systematic agricultural colonization, while the Maya used a model of socio-technical adaptation which entailed community-based innovation to create complex networks of reservoirs, a variety of agricultural strategies and environmental response to environmental changes. Nevertheless, in spite of these dramatic differences, the two civilizations attained plenty of concentration of the population and long-term sustainability, which just proves that there are several ways to organize human settlements and govern relations with the environment. This comparative framework opposes environmental determinism and admits ecological constraints, which shows that human agency acting at various scales with specific institutional configurations is the key factor in the processes of adaptation. The study offers methodological models on how researches on cross-cultural settlement can be conducted over the next few years and also offers historical insights that can be used in the current debate surrounding sustainable urbanism, climate adaptation, and the various approaches that human societies can adopt to negotiate through the complex systems of socio-ecological environment.