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The Evolution of Complex Hunter-Gatherers
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The Evolution of Complex Hunter-Gatherers

Complex hunter-gatherers have captivated anthropological and archaeological interest during the last two decades of the 20th century. Where it was once commonplace to view hunting and gathering as little more than a starting point for social evolution, in the 21st century, scholars appreciate great diversity in past and present hunter-gatherer societies. The challenge of explaining the development of complexity in hunter-gatherer groups breathes new life into hunter-gatherer studies, focusing not only on adaptive variation but also on evolution and history. This book makes a contribution to the developing field of complex hunter-gatherer studies with an archaeological analysis of the development of one such group. It examines the evolution of complex hunter-gatherers on the North Pacific coast of Alaska. It strives to account for the dynamics and processes that transformed a population from low density, disaggregated, relatively mobile, and relatively egalitarian organizations into the demographically dense, sedentary, aggregated, militaristic, and ranked/stratified populations around the North Pacific by the time of ethnographic contact. To do so, this book examines 7000 years of archaeological history on the Kodiak Archipelago - a region that 250 years ago was part of a broader phenomenon of complex hunter-gatherers ringing the North American Pacific Northwest Coast from California to the Aleutian Islands.
Undertitel
Archaeological Evidence from the North Pacific
Författare
Ben Fitzhugh
Upplaga
2003 ed.
ISBN
9780306478536
Språk
Engelska
Vikt
310 gram
Utgivningsdatum
31.7.2003
Sidor
332