Buch, Englisch, 299 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 635 g
Buch, Englisch, 299 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 635 g
Reihe: Interdisciplinary Contributions to Archaeology
ISBN: 978-3-031-49698-1
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Bringing together an international set of scholars, this volume presents integrative theoretical and methodological perspectives linking two complementary approaches in anthropological archaeology: cultural landscapes and human ecology. Authors grapple with issues ranging from the hunter-gatherer populations of North America and the emergence of the Neolithic in Europe to contemporary hunter-gatherer societies, using approaches from ethnoarchaeology to geomorphology, and methodological specialties from stable isotopes to social networks, in order to shed light on prehistoric human adaptations and how they produce cultural variation on a landscape scale. Together, contributions to this volume illustrate how interdisciplinary and integrative perspectives can aid archaeology by providing the means necessary to interpret and explain long-term records of human activity.
This book capitalizes on the unique position of archaeology, and the long-term records of human ecology and cultural resilience the discipline develops, to make significant contributions to contemporary discussions of long-term climate human-environment interactions throughout the Holocene. The book is therefore produced during a perfect time in which other disciplines are focusing on the unique contribution that can be made by archaeology.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Chapter 1. Cultural Landscapes and Long-Term Human Ecology (Erick Robinson, Susan K. Harris, and Brian F. Codding).-Chapter 2. Models, Foragers, Human Beings, and a Hunter-Gatherer Career (Douglas B. Bamforth).- Chapter 3. Defining and Modeling the Dimensions of Settlement Choice: An Empirical Approach (Kenneth L. Kvamme).- Chapter 4. Isobiographies and Archaeology Beyond Long-Term Ethnography: Life History Reconstruction Using Stable Isotopes (Jelmer W. Eerkens and Eric J. Bartelink).- Chapter 5. Caribou Inuit Activity and Settlement around Yathkyed: A Record of Archaeological Features in an Inland Arctic Landscape, Canada (Andrew M. Stewart).- Chapter 6. Resource Acquisition Risk and Gender Division of Foraging Labor: Australian Lessons for Hunter-Gatherer Archaeology (Brian F. Codding, Rebecca Bliege Bird, David W. Zeanah, and Douglas W. Bird).- Chapter 7. Niche Construction and the Ideal Free Distribution: Partners In Characterizing Past Human-Environment Dynamics (Sarah B. McClure and Douglas J. Kennett).- Chapter 8. Reconsidering the Amazonian Interfluvial Occupation (Myrtle P. Shock).- Chapter 9. Early Holocene Human Ecology and Adaptation to Millennial and Centennial-Scale Climate Change: A Case Study from the North Sea Basin (Erick Robinson and Jacob Freeman).- Chapter 10. Technological Changes in Lithic Reduction as a Chronological Indicator in Surface Artifact Scatters (Susan K. Harris).- Chapter 11. Neolithic Cultural Landscapes in Southwestern Germany: Exploring Contributions of Regional Survey (Lynn E. Fisher, Susan K. Harris, Rainer Schreg, and Corina Knipper).- Chapter 12. Neolithic and Bronze Age Bog Settlements in the Federsee Basin (Baden-Württemberg, Germany) (Helmut Schlichtherle).- Index.