1. The Identification of Prehistoric Hunter-Gatherer Aggregation Sites: The Case of Altamira [and Comments and Reply]
- Author
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Margaret W. Conkey, Antonio Beltrán, G. A. Clark, J. González Echegaray, M. G. Guenther, Joachim Hahn, Brian Hayden, K. Paddayya, Lawrence G. Straus, and Karel Valoch
- Subjects
Prehistory ,Archeology ,History ,Variation (linguistics) ,Anthropology ,Ecology (disciplines) ,Ethnology ,Subsistence agriculture ,Identification (biology) ,Magdalenian ,Archaeology ,Hunter-gatherer - Abstract
It is a common assumption that an aggregation-and-dispersion pattern characterizes most of the world's hunter-gatherers, both past and present. A clarification of the pattern is put forth in support of the view that there is more to it than factors of subsistence ecology. Because there are many variants of hunter-gatherer aggregations, in terms of both activities and the factors that promote and effect them, it is clear that there will also be variation in their duration, location, cyclicity, and extent and the number and kinds of personnel involved. The implications of this variability for archeologists are discussed, and the need for establishing specific archeological test implications for the identification of each variant of prehistoric aggregation sites is emphasized. Data from one hypothesized aggregation locale, the Early Magdalenian site of Altamira (Cantabria, Spain), are drawn upon for a better understanding of the kinds of analytical questions we must frame and the kinds of data and analysis w...
- Published
- 1980
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