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ref:
2003/3 (1)
The
health of sedentism, sharing and diet and the illnesses
of aggregation
Susan
Kent
Anthropology Program, Old Dominion University, Norfolk
VA23529, USA
Keywords:
Hunter-gatherers, diet, health, sharing, sedentism,
past societies
Abstract
Health is a multifaceted and complex condition, as is
its absence - illness. The role of morbidity and mortality
from pathogens varied through time in fascinating ways.
What kind of models are appropriate for past societies?
Sharing and health, for example, are interestingly linked
in ways usually not recognised by anthropologists. In
order to understand the changing patterns of health
through time, it is necessary, I suggest, to understand
the changing patterns of sharing, aggregation, and sedentism.
Diet, and particularly farming, I propose, had a much
smaller role in the spread and perpetuation of disease
than is usually attributed to it. Instead, aggregation
had a much larger role in promoting higher morbidity
among hunter-gatherers past and present than is usually
attributed, especially when coupled with sedentism.


ref:
2003/3 (2)
Aboriginal
economy and society at the threshold of colonisation:
a comparative study
Ian
Keen
School
of Archaeology and Anthropology, The Faculties
Australian
National University, Canberra 0200, Australia
Ian.Keen@anu.edu.au
Keywords:
Aborigines, economy and society, comparative analysis,
precolonial, Australia
Abstract
Drawing
on early ethnography as well as more recent studies,
this paper summarises the results of a comparative study
of Aboriginal economy and society in seven contrasting
regions of Australia as they were at the threshold of
colonisation. The comparison proceeds along several
dimensions: environment and population, resources and
technology, settlement and mobility, key institutional
forms (modes of identity, kinship, cosmology and governance),
and economy (control of production, organisation of
production, distribution and consumption, exchange and
trade). The study indicates that in spite of widely
contrasting environments, very varied population densities,
and degrees of mobility, the organisation of production
and basic patterns of distribution were very similar
in all regions. Institutional forms varied considerably,
however. The paper traces some of the conditions and
consequences of this variation.


ref: 2003/3
(3)
Dreaming
the country and burning the land: rock-art and ecological
knowledge
Paul
Faulstich
Environmental Studies, Pitzer College
1050
N Mills Avenue, Claremont, CA 91711, USA
paul_faulstich@pitzer.edu
Keywords:
Ecological knowledge, nature, sense of place, symbolism,
worldview
Abstract
Human relationships with the world are deeply affected
by the images used to understand and express our place
in nature. Ecologically, art and symbolic modelling
demonstrate an ordering of information about the world.
They are bio-cultural artefacts necessary to ordering
human socio-cultural life, and while our regard for
art may be predicated on aesthetics, our need for art
is biological. The biological imperative of symbolic
modeling has not, however, been adequately analysed.
Rock-art documents vast environmental knowledge of indigenous
and local peoples. A people's ecological knowledge affects
its subsistence and adaptation, is relevant to interpreting
rock-art, and relates to broader issues of contemporary
environmental predicaments. Recent work in this area
suggests the value of traditional ecological knowledge
in addressing socio-ecological problems, and sheds light
on diverse ontologies of knowledge. Ethnoecology has
importance in an increasingly interconnected world,
and illuminates human encounters with nature. This paper
provides theoretical insight into traditional ecological
knowledge as elucidated through rock-art.
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re:
2003/3 (4)
Changing
ecological concerns in rock-art subject matter of north
Australia's Keep River region
Paul
Taçon, Ken Mulvaney, Sven Ouzman
Richard
Fullagar, Lesley Head and Paddy Carlton
Keywords:
Australia, 'Bradshaw' rock-paintings, Keep River, rock-art
Abstract
The Keep River region has a complex body of engraved
and painted rock-art, distinct from but with links to
regions to the east, west and south. At least four major
periods of figurative rock-art have been identified
with differing subject matters and ages. Significant
changes in depictions of human figures and animals are
evident, reflecting shifts in emphasis associated with
ecological concerns and environmental change. We flesh
out the relative rock-art chronology by highlighting
these changes, from worlds dominated by humans to those
dominated by mammals and birds, and finally to a recent
world of reptiles and humans. Symbolic aspects of the
imagery are also considered within a larger ecological
approach.


ref:
2003/3 (5)
Marks
of contemplation: cup-and-ring rock-art from Ireland
Carol
Martin
5 Garville Road, Rathgal, Dublin 6, Ireland
carolnimhairtin@eircom.net
Keywords:
Rock-art, Ireland, Australia, landscape, function
Abstract
Much
of the power and appeal of rock-art sites comes from
their location. Landscape becomes a very important issue
when dealing with rock-art, as the outlook from and
to a rock-art site, and position in the landscape may
give some clues as to function, which could in turn
give us some ideas as to how it may have been interpreted.
This article looks at the similarities in landscape
locations chosen by the Irish Bronze Age artists, and
the Australian Aboriginal 'Panaramitee' artists. Both
have chosen sites that hold a commanding view that are
within 50 m of a water source, and on rock outcrops
rather than in caves or shelters. The similarities are
not just confined to landscape. Many of the rock-art
motifs used are visually similar. Could these similarities
in landscape emplacement and appearance suggest a similar
use, and perhaps meaning to those who created it? Surely
we are only getting a fraction of the aesthetic value
of rock-art when we ignore its meaning and use.
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©
Western Academic & Specialist Press Ltd 2003
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