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ref:
2002/3_4 (1)
Coastal
hunter-gatherers and social evolution:
marginal or central?
Geoff Bailey
School of Historical Studies, Archaeology, University
of Newcastle upon Tyne, Newcastle NE1 7RU, UK
g.n.bailey@ncl.ac.uk
Nicky
Milner
School of Historical Studies, Archaeology, University
of Newcastle upon Tyne, Newcastle NE1 7RU, UK
n.j.milner@ncl.ac.uk
Keywords:
coastlines, marine resources, palaeodiet, stable isotopes,
Mesolithic/Neolithic transition
Abstract
General
accounts of global trends in world prehistory are dominated
by narratives of conquest on land: scavenging and hunting
of land mammals, migration over land bridges and colonisation
of new continents, gathering of plants, domestication,
cultivation, and ultimately sustained population growth
founded on agricultural surplus. Marine and aquatic
resources fit uneasily into this sequence of social
and economic development, and societies strongly dependent
on them have often been regarded as relatively late
in the sequence, geographically marginal or anomalous.
We consider the biases and preconceptions of the ethnographic
and archaeological records that have contributed to
this view of marginality and examine some current issues
focusing on the role of marine resources at the Mesolithic-Neolithic
transition of northwest Europe. We suggest that pre-existing
conventions should be critically re-examined, that coastlines
may have played a more significant, widespread and persistent
role as zones of attraction for human dispersal, population
growth and social interaction than is commonly recognised,
and that this has been obscured by hunter-gatherer and
farmer stereotypes of prehistoric economies.
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ref:
2002/3_4 (2)
Climate,
floods and river gods: environmental
change and the MesoNeolithic transition in southeast
Europe
Clive Bonsall
School of Arts, Culture & Environment, University
of Edinburgh, Old High School,
Infirmary Street, Edinburgh EH1 1LT
C.Bonsall@ed.ac.uk
Mark
G Macklin
Institute of Geography and Earth Sciences, University
of Wales, Aberystwyth SY23 3DB
mvm@aber.ac.uk
Robert
W Payton
School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, University
of Newcastle upon Tyne,
Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU
r.w.payton@ncl.ac.uk
Adina
Boroneant
Institute of Archaeology V Pârvan,
Str Henri Coandã 11, sect 1, Bucuresti, România
Keywords:
climate, rivers, floods, Mesolithic, Neolithic, Iron
Gates, southeast Europe
Abstract
A
conspicuous gap in the radiocarbon record of the Iron
Gates Mesolithic suggests that many riverbank sites
were abandoned between c 8250 and 7900 cal BP.1 This
period of site abandonment is linked to increased flooding
along the Danube, which can be correlated with a distinct
global climatic oscillation. The implications of these
environmental changes for the interpretation of Lepenski
Vir and the timing of the MesoNeolithic transition
in the northern Balkans are examined. There is growing
evidence of climatic instability during the Holocene
and its effects on river systems. We suggest that climate-related
flooding had a significant impact on human settlement
and use of riverine environments in southeast Europe
during the middle Holocene, and may even have been an
important stimulus of culture change.
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ref:
2002/3_4 (3)
Hunting
and feasting: health and demographic
consequences
Brian
Hayden
Archaeology Department, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby,
BC, Canada
bhayden@sfu.ca
Keywords:
hunter/gatherers, feasting, demography, nutrition, transegalitarian
societies
Abstract
With
the advent of surplus-based feasting among transegalitarian
hunter/gatherers, major changes have taken place in
other aspects of society. The most dramatic changes
involve the private (or corporate group) ownership of
resource procurement locations and resource products.
Control over these resources was used to improve individual
chances of survival, successful reproduction, and quality
of life. Therefore, generalised sharing was curtailed
wherever possible, creating real inequities in nutrition,
health, and reproductive potentials. The nature of the
advantages derived from surplus-based feasting and the
character of ownership versus sharing are explored using
data from the North American Northwest.
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ref:
2002/3_4 (4)
Food
for the living, food for the dead
Lars Larsson
Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, University
of Lund, Sandgatan 1, SE-223 50 LUND, Sweden
Lars.Larsson@ark.lu.se
Keywords: food, mortuary practice, Mesolithic,
Scandinavia
Abstract
In several graves from the two Late Mesolithic cemeteries
at Skateholm, southernmost Sweden, remains of food in
the form of fish bones were found. Samples of bones
appear in the digestive region of the interred but also
as gifts to the interred and at different levels in
the grave pit deposited during the process of filling
in. How do these remains relate to the refuse from the
occupation layers of the sites located above or close
to the graves? Similarities and differences in food
distribution patterns may provide a perspective on cosmology,
including everyday life in hunter-gatherer societies,
and on the importance of food in mortuary practice.
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ref:
2002/3_4 (5)
Palaeoecological
reconstruction and hominid land use of the Lake Natron
basin during the Early Pleistocene
Clare
Downey
Instituto de Estudios Europeos, Colegio Mayor San Agustín,
Avenida de Séneca, 7
28040 Madrid, Spain
Manuel
Domínguez-Rodrigo*
Departamento de Prehistoria, Facultad de Geografía
e Historia, Universidad Complutense de Madrid, Ciudad
Universitaria s/n, 28040 Madrid, Spain
mdr00008@teleline.es
* to
whom correspondence should be addressed
Keywords:resource
patch, corridors, land use, carcasses, competition,
riparian habitats, highlands, archaeological sites,
Early Acheulian.
Abstract
Land
use models ecologically derived from modern east African
savanna dynamics have been used for modelling Olduvai
Gorge in the Early Pleistocene, and provide an ecological
framework in which archaeological hypotheses could be
tested (Peters & Blumenschine 1995; Blumenschine
& Peters 1998). The present work applies the same
ecologically derived criteria to a first-generation
model of hominid land use in west Lake Natron, geographically
close to the Olduvai region. In this area, Plio-Pleistocene
archaeological sites have been discovered at Peninj.
This information widens and helps refine the ecological
scope used for Olduvai, given the proximity in space
and the similar chronology for the palaeoecosystems
analysed. Several important environmental and geological
factors and variables differentiate Peninj from Olduvai.
A lower altitude, lower precipitation, a more open environment,
fewer plant resources, and greater competition with
carnivores for prey would have made Peninj an ecologically
unique location. Hominids at Peninj probably exhibited
a different behaviour than those at Olduvai to overcome
the selective criteria that made adaptation more difficult.
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Western Academic & Specialist Press Ltd
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