In this paper, I study the application of phylogenetic analysis in evolutionary archaeology. I show how transfer of this apparently general analytic tool is affected by salient differences in disciplinary context. One is that archaeologists, unlike many biologists, do not regard cladistics as a tool for classification, but are primarily interested in explanation. The other is that explanation is traditionally sought in terms of individual-level rather than population-level mechanisms. The latter disciplinary difference creates an ambiguity in the application and interpretation of phylogenetic analyses. Moreover, I argue that, while archaeologists have claimed that “cladistics is useful for reconstructing artefact phylogenies” (O’Brien et al...
Genes are propagated by error-prone copying, and the resulting variation provides the basis for phyl...
The application of Darwinian evolutionary theory to archaeology has taken two divergent and rather d...
Douglas Bamforth\u27s recent paper in American Antiquity, Evidence and Metaphor in Evolutionary Arc...
In this paper, I study the application of phylogenetic analysis in evolutionary archaeology. I show ...
Evolutionary theory has outgrown its natural habitat. Increasingly, researchers outside biology fram...
Modern phylogenetic methods are increasingly being used to address questions about macro-level patte...
The styles of continuing intellectual traditions can have a major effect on the way in which scienti...
This paper presents a perspective on the relationship between cladistic methods and the study of fos...
Archaeology is often defined by our interest in how cultural traditions change over time and generat...
Here, I consider the recent application of phylogenetic methods in historical linguistics. After a p...
The construction and use of phylogenetic trees is central to modern systematics. But it is unclear e...
Interpretation of phylogenetic trees is fundamental in understanding the relationships between organ...
Early anthropologists and archaeologists believed that a direct analogy could be made between proces...
Anthropology began by comparing across cultures: the ethnographic record is the richest source of da...
This paper presents a short history of the influence evolutionary thinking has had on anthropology a...
Genes are propagated by error-prone copying, and the resulting variation provides the basis for phyl...
The application of Darwinian evolutionary theory to archaeology has taken two divergent and rather d...
Douglas Bamforth\u27s recent paper in American Antiquity, Evidence and Metaphor in Evolutionary Arc...
In this paper, I study the application of phylogenetic analysis in evolutionary archaeology. I show ...
Evolutionary theory has outgrown its natural habitat. Increasingly, researchers outside biology fram...
Modern phylogenetic methods are increasingly being used to address questions about macro-level patte...
The styles of continuing intellectual traditions can have a major effect on the way in which scienti...
This paper presents a perspective on the relationship between cladistic methods and the study of fos...
Archaeology is often defined by our interest in how cultural traditions change over time and generat...
Here, I consider the recent application of phylogenetic methods in historical linguistics. After a p...
The construction and use of phylogenetic trees is central to modern systematics. But it is unclear e...
Interpretation of phylogenetic trees is fundamental in understanding the relationships between organ...
Early anthropologists and archaeologists believed that a direct analogy could be made between proces...
Anthropology began by comparing across cultures: the ethnographic record is the richest source of da...
This paper presents a short history of the influence evolutionary thinking has had on anthropology a...
Genes are propagated by error-prone copying, and the resulting variation provides the basis for phyl...
The application of Darwinian evolutionary theory to archaeology has taken two divergent and rather d...
Douglas Bamforth\u27s recent paper in American Antiquity, Evidence and Metaphor in Evolutionary Arc...