Archaeological Review from Cambridge, Volume 2Department of Archaeology, 1983 - Archaeology |
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Page 48
Introduction PEOPLE AND SPACE IN HUNTER - GATHERER CAMPS : A GENERALISING APPROACH IN ETHNOARCHAEOLOGY Todd Whitelaw Interest in the relationship between settlement population and settlement space has generated a sizeable volume of ...
Introduction PEOPLE AND SPACE IN HUNTER - GATHERER CAMPS : A GENERALISING APPROACH IN ETHNOARCHAEOLOGY Todd Whitelaw Interest in the relationship between settlement population and settlement space has generated a sizeable volume of ...
Page 58
However , the Alyawara and many other hunter - gatherer groups do not pursue this principle to the point of doing mental MDSCAL to arrive at a circle . Clearly , while the basic principle may generate the form , it is not , in itself ...
However , the Alyawara and many other hunter - gatherer groups do not pursue this principle to the point of doing mental MDSCAL to arrive at a circle . Clearly , while the basic principle may generate the form , it is not , in itself ...
Page 66
Silberbauer , G.B. 1981 Hunter and Habitat in the Central Kalahari Desert . Cambridge University Press , Cambridge . Smith , E.A. 1981 The application of optimal foraging theory to the analysis of hunter - gatherer group size .
Silberbauer , G.B. 1981 Hunter and Habitat in the Central Kalahari Desert . Cambridge University Press , Cambridge . Smith , E.A. 1981 The application of optimal foraging theory to the analysis of hunter - gatherer group size .
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Academic activity analogies analysis Anthropology approach archaeological associated attempt behaviour Binford bone by-products Cambridge camps campsites changes classes communities complex context contribution cultural dependent discussion distance distribution domestic early economic edited Ethnoarchaeology ethnographic evidence example excavation fact field Figure function gathering groups hearth Hodder household hunter-gatherer hunting important included increasing individuals interest interpretation issue Kung living London major manufacture material mean Monuments nature nomad observations occur organisation particular past patterns population possible pottery present Press problem processing production questions range record References relationship relevant remains result Review Roman samples season camps seeds settlement sieve similar situation social society space spatial specific stages stone storage stratification structure suggest tent Theft Act 1968 theory tion units University variables village weed York Zardeh