Early Hominid Activities at OlduvaiAldineTransaction - Всего страниц: 396 The earliest sites at Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania are among the best documented and most important for studies of human evolution. This book investigates the behavior of hominids at Olduvai using data of stone tools and animal bones, as well as the results of work in taphonomy (how animals become fossils), the behavior of mammals, and a wide range of ecological theory and data. By illustrating the ways in which modern and prehistoric evidence is used in making interpretations, the author guides the reader through the geological, ecological, and archeological areas involved in the study of humans. Based on his study of the Olduvai excavations, animal life, and stone tools, the author carefully examines conventional views and proposals about the early Olduvai sites. First, the evidence of site geology, tool cut marks, and other clues to the formation of the Olduvai sites are explored. On this basis, the large mammal communities in which early hominids lived are investigated, using methods which compare sites produced mainly by hominids with others made by carnivores. Questions about hominid hunting, scavenging, and the importance of eating meat are then scrutinized. The leading alternative positions on each issue are discussed, providing a basis for understanding some of the most contentious debates in paleo-anthropology today. The dominant interpretive model for the artifact and bone accumulations at Olduvai and other Plio-Pleistocene sites has been that they represent "home bases," social foci similar to the campsites of hunter-gatherers. Based on paleo-ecological evidence and ecological models, the author critically analyzes the home base interpretation and proposes alternative views. A new view of the Olduvai sitesâ that they represent stone caches where hominids processed carcasses for foodâ is shown to have important implications for our understanding of hominid social behavior and evolution. |
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... Leakey's research at Olduvai from 1959 to 1985; her volume (Leakey, 1971) which describes in detail the excavations and stone artifacts from Bed I is a landmark publication in the field of early human archeology. Richard Hay's research ...
... Leakey for permission to study the Olduvai material. This research would not have been possible without her pioneering excavation, dedicated organization of bone and artifact materials, and hospitality during my stay at Olduvai. By her ...
... Leakey and the National Museums of Kenya; A.A. Mturi; F. Masao and the National Museum of Tanzania; and J. de Vos, D.A. Hooijer, and the Rijksmuseum van N atuurlijke Historie, Leiden. The inspiration and intellectual contributions of ...
... Leakey, showed what very early stone tools looked like and what species of animals were contemporary with the hominid toolmakers. From 1959 through the early ... Leakey during the early 1960s. Leakey's excavations concentrated on the two. 5.
... Leakey that the sites in Bed I were areas where hominids had brought stone tools and had eaten the meat of animals represented by bones. The animal bones found with the artifacts thus became especially important to interpretations of ...
Содержание
5 | |
15 | |
Physical Agents of Concentration | 57 |
Behavioral Agents of Bone Accumulation | 81 |
Paleocommunities and Environments of Olduvai | 153 |
Obtaining Resources and Accumulating Debris | 203 |
A Prelude to Home Bases | 249 |
Conclusion | 297 |
Bibliography | 313 |
Site DK | 333 |
Site FLKNN3 | 351 |
Site FLK22 | 370 |
Index | 390 |
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Early Hominid Activities at Olduvai: Foundations of Human Behaviour Richard Potts Ограниченный просмотр - 2017 |
Early Hominid Activities at Olduvai: Foundations of Human Behaviour Richard Potts Ограниченный просмотр - 2017 |