Recent Publication—Occasional
Paper 30
Hunters and Gatherers in Theory and Archaeology
edited by George M. Crothers
The contributions in this volume reflect the diverse and anthropologically
current debate flourishing in prehistoric hunter and gatherer research.
Highlighting research in Africa, Australia, Europe, North America, and
the Subarctic, theoretical approaches range from the ecological to the
sociological. Methodological topics include optimal foraging, settlement
models, population dynamics, lithic and faunal studies, ethnoarchaeology,
and oral history. These essays show that the study of prehistoric hunters
and gatherers is making great strides to integrate the social, economic,
and political dimensions of forager behavior.
ORDER NOW
Contents:
1. Hunters and Gatherers in Theory and Archaeology: An Introduction
George M. Crothers
2. Adaptive Responses of Paleoindians to Cold Stress on the Periglacial
Northern Great Plains
Alan J. Osborn
3. Paleoindian Population Dynamics in New England: Possible Typological
Consequences
Brian D. Jones
4. Hunter-Gatherer Aggregation in Theory and Evidence: The Eastern North
American Paleoindian Case
Michael J. Shott
5. Hunter-Gatherers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming: Testing Assumptions About
Site Function
Kenneth P. Cannon, Dawn R. Bringelson, and Molly Boeka Cannon
6. Environment and Resource Distribution in the British Early Mesolithic:
Toward More Defined Settlement Modeling
Michael J. Reynier
7. Places, Ranges, and Paths: The Pleistocene-Holocene Transition in Southern
Germany
Lynn E. Fisher
8. Alternative Models of Spatial Organization for Pleistocene Hunter-Gatherers
Ariane M. Burke
9. Hunter-Gatherer Food Sharing: Social and Economic Interactions
James G. Enloe
10. Meat Sharing and the Archaeological Record: A Test of the Show-Off
Hypothesis Among Central African Bofi Foragers
Karen D. Lupo and Dave N. Schmitt
11. Optimal Foraging Theory and Technoeconomic Evolution Among Northern
Maritime Hunter-Gatherers
David R. Yesner
12. Optimal Foraging Theory and Cognitive Archaeology: Cup'ik Cultural
Perception in Southwestern Alaska
Caroline L. Funk
13. A Tale of Two Settlement Patterns: Environmental and Cultural Determinants
of Inuit and Dene Site Distributions
T. Max Friesen
14. Plant-Use Schedules, Decreased Mobility, and Social Differentiation:
Hunter-Gatherers in Forested Chile
Jack Rossen and Tom D. Dillehay
15. Delayed-Return Hunter-Gatherers in Africa? Historic Perspectives from
the Okiek and Archaeological Perspectives from the Kansyore
Darla Dale, Fiona Marshall, and Tom Pilgram
16. Hunter-Gatherer Settlement Patterns in a Subhumid-to-Semiarid Environment
Michael Pickering
17. The Foraging Mode of Production: The Case of the Green River Archaic
Shell Middens
George M. Crothers and Reinhard Bernbeck
18. Roots of the Theocratic Formative of the Archaic Southeast
Kenneth E. Sassaman and Michael J. Heckenberger
19. Whales, Harpoons, and Other Actors: Actor-Network Theory and Hunter-Gatherer
Archaeology
Peter Whitridge
20. Discussants' Comments and Overview
Robert L. Bettinger and Peter Rowley-Conwy
|