Archaeology as Human Ecology
Title | Archaeology as Human Ecology PDF eBook |
Author | Karl W. Butzer |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 386 |
Release | 1982-05-31 |
Genre | Nature |
ISBN | 9780521288774 |
Archaeology as Human Ecology is a new introduction to concepts and methods in archaeology. It deals not with artifacts, but with sites, settlements, and subsistence. It is essential reading for students, research workers, and all concerned with archaeological method and theory.
The Archaeology of Human-Environment Interactions
Title | The Archaeology of Human-Environment Interactions PDF eBook |
Author | Daniel Contreras |
Publisher | Taylor & Francis |
Pages | 283 |
Release | 2016-08-25 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1317450620 |
The impacts of climate change on human societies, and the roles those societies themselves play in altering their environments, appear in headlines more and more as concern over modern global climate change intensifies. Increasingly, archaeologists and paleoenvironmental scientists are looking to evidence from the human past to shed light on the processes which link environmental and cultural change. Establishing clear contemporaneity and correlation, and then moving beyond correlation to causation, remains as much a theoretical task as a methodological one. This book addresses this challenge by exploring new approaches to human-environment dynamics and confronting the key task of constructing arguments that can link the two in concrete and detailed ways. The contributors include researchers working in a wide variety of regions and time periods, including Mesoamerica, Mongolia, East Africa, the Amazon Basin, and the Island Pacific, among others. Using methodological vignettes from their own research, the contributors explore diverse approaches to human-environment dynamics, illustrating the manifold nature of the subject and suggesting a wide variety of strategies for approaching it. This book will be of interest to researchers and scholars in Archaeology, Paleoenvironmental Science, Ecology, and Geology.
A Human Environment
Title | A Human Environment PDF eBook |
Author | Victor Klinkenberg |
Publisher | |
Pages | 190 |
Release | 2020-05-20 |
Genre | |
ISBN | 9789088909061 |
This volume is themed around the interdependent relationship between humans and the environment, an important topic in the work of Corrie Bakels. How do environmental constraints and opportunities influence human behaviour and what is the human impact on the ecology and appearance of the landscape? And what can archaeological knowledge contribute to the current discussions about the use, arrangement and depletion of our (local) environment?
Human Ecology of Beringia
Title | Human Ecology of Beringia PDF eBook |
Author | John F. Hoffecker |
Publisher | Columbia University Press |
Pages | 314 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 9780231130608 |
Twenty-five thousand years ago, sea level fell more than 400 feet below its present position as a consequence of the growth of immense ice sheets in the Northern Hemisphere. A dry plain stretching 1,000 miles from the Arctic Ocean to the Aleutians became exposed between northeast Asia and Alaska, and across that plain, most likely, walked the first people of the New World. This book describes what is known about these people and the now partly submerged land, named Beringia, which they settled during the final millennia of the Ice Age. Humans first occupied Beringia during a twilight period when rising sea levels had not yet caught up with warming climates. Although the land bridge between northeast Asia and Alaska was still present, warmer and wetter climates were rapidly transforming the Beringian steppe into shrub tundra. This volume synthesizes current research-some previously unpublished-on the archaeological sites and rapidly changing climates and biota of the period, suggesting that the absence of woody shrubs to help fire bone fuel may have been the barrier to earlier settlement, and that from the outset the Beringians developed a postglacial economy similar to that of later northern interior peoples. The book opens with a review of current research and the major problems and debates regarding the environment and archaeology of Beringia. It then describes Beringian environments and the controversies surrounding their interpretation; traces the evolving adaptations of early humans to the cold environments of northern Eurasia, which set the stage for the settlement of Beringia; and provides a detailed account of the archaeological record in three chapters, each of which is focused on a specific slice of time between 15,000 and 11,500 years ago. In conclusion, the authors present an interpretive summary of the human ecology of Beringia and discuss its relationship to the wider problem of the peopling of the New World.
Prehistory and Human Ecology of the Deh Luran Plain
Title | Prehistory and Human Ecology of the Deh Luran Plain PDF eBook |
Author | Frank Hole |
Publisher | U OF M MUSEUM ANTHRO ARCHAEOLOGY |
Pages | 517 |
Release | 1969 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1949098478 |
In the early 1960s, archaeologists Frank Hole, Kent V. Flannery, and James A. Neely surveyed the prehistoric mounds in Deh Luran and then excavated at two sites: Ali Kosh and Tepe Sabz. The researchers found evidence that the sites dated to between 7500 and 3500 BC, during which time the residents domesticated plants and animals. This volume, published in 1969, was the first in the Museum’s Memoir series—designed for data-rich, heavily illustrated archaeological monographs.
Evolutionary Ecology and Archaeology
Title | Evolutionary Ecology and Archaeology PDF eBook |
Author | Jack M. Broughton |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2010 |
Genre | Science |
ISBN | 9780874809350 |
A compilation of archaeological and paleoanthropological studies that provide a foundation for the field of evolutionary ecology, which applies Darwinian natural selection theory to the study of adaptive design in behavior, morphology, and life history and has produced substantial advances in understanding human evolution and prehistory.
The Model-based Archaeology of Socionatural Systems
Title | The Model-based Archaeology of Socionatural Systems PDF eBook |
Author | Timothy A. Kohler |
Publisher | |
Pages | 328 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | Nature |
ISBN |
How should archaeologists and other social scientists tackle the big and little questions about change in socionatural systems? Although fieldwork is certainly the place to start, it alone is not enough to answer troublesome "how" or "why" questions. To make sense of what they find in the field, archaeologists build models-possible explanations for the data. This book is about new developments in applying dynamic models for understanding relatively small-scale human systems and the environments they inhabit and alter. Beginning with a complex systems approach, the authors develop a "model-based archaeology" that uses specific, generally quantitative models providing partial descriptions of socionatural systems of interest that are then examined against those systems. Taken together, the chapters in this volume constitute an argument for a new way of thinking about how archaeology is (and should be) conducted.