It is widely assumed that modern hunter-gatherer societies lived until very recently in isolation from food-producing societies and states and practiced neither cultivation, pastoralism, nor trade. This paper brings together data suggesting a very different model of middle to late Holocene hunter-gatherer economy. It is argued that such foraging groups were heavily dependent upon both trade with food-producing populations and part-time cultivation or pastoralism. Recent publications on a number of hunter-gather societies establish that the symbiosis and desultory food production observed among them today are neither recent nor anomalous but represent an economy practiced by most hunter- gatherers for many hundreds, if not thousands, of year...
We consider a world in which the mode of food production, foraging or agriculture, is endogenous, an...
Past human groups of the High Plains have been variously characterized as starving nomads and afflue...
This article, an unpublished essay delivered at the Fifth International Conference on Hunting and Ga...
from Prehistory to the Present*1 It is widely assumed that modern hunter-gatherer societies lived un...
It is popularly thought that today's existing hunter-gatherers lived until recently in isolation, in...
At the global scale, conceptions of hunter-gatherer economies have changed considerably over time an...
ABSTRACT Anthropological and behavioral ecological studies of living hunter-gatherers have flourishe...
Hunter-gatherers are often portrayed as 'others' standing outside the main trajectory of human socia...
This handbook examines the ethnohistory of hunter-gatherers and its relevance to archaeology and ant...
Two paradigms have been used to describe the nature of twentieth-century huntergatherers, one focuse...
Over the past century, the fields of archaeology and anthropology have produced a number of differen...
Over the past century, the fields of archaeology and anthropology have produced a number of differen...
After agriculture commenced ten thousand years ago, hunting and gathering economies are supposed to ...
Holocene foragers may indeed have filled a new niche in many places, but by analyzing how climate, f...
We examine how hunter-gatherers are imagined in popular debate in Britain and Ireland, demonstratin...
We consider a world in which the mode of food production, foraging or agriculture, is endogenous, an...
Past human groups of the High Plains have been variously characterized as starving nomads and afflue...
This article, an unpublished essay delivered at the Fifth International Conference on Hunting and Ga...
from Prehistory to the Present*1 It is widely assumed that modern hunter-gatherer societies lived un...
It is popularly thought that today's existing hunter-gatherers lived until recently in isolation, in...
At the global scale, conceptions of hunter-gatherer economies have changed considerably over time an...
ABSTRACT Anthropological and behavioral ecological studies of living hunter-gatherers have flourishe...
Hunter-gatherers are often portrayed as 'others' standing outside the main trajectory of human socia...
This handbook examines the ethnohistory of hunter-gatherers and its relevance to archaeology and ant...
Two paradigms have been used to describe the nature of twentieth-century huntergatherers, one focuse...
Over the past century, the fields of archaeology and anthropology have produced a number of differen...
Over the past century, the fields of archaeology and anthropology have produced a number of differen...
After agriculture commenced ten thousand years ago, hunting and gathering economies are supposed to ...
Holocene foragers may indeed have filled a new niche in many places, but by analyzing how climate, f...
We examine how hunter-gatherers are imagined in popular debate in Britain and Ireland, demonstratin...
We consider a world in which the mode of food production, foraging or agriculture, is endogenous, an...
Past human groups of the High Plains have been variously characterized as starving nomads and afflue...
This article, an unpublished essay delivered at the Fifth International Conference on Hunting and Ga...