Taking inspiration from the archaeology of the Texas Coastal Plain (TCP), we develop an ecological theory of population distribution among mobile hunter-gatherers. This theory proposes that, due to the heterogeneity of resources in space and time, foragers create networks of habitats that they access through residential cycling and shared knowledge. The degree of cycling that individuals exhibit in creating networks of habitats, encoded through social relationships, depends on the relative scarcity of resources and fluctuations in those resources. Using a dynamic model of hunter-gatherer population distribution, we illustrate that increases in population density, coupled with shocks to a biophysical or social system, creates a selective env...
In this paper we combine foraging theory and population biology models to simulate dynamic relations...
<div><p>Settlement size predicts extreme variation in the rates and magnitudes of many social and ec...
We investigated the relationship between the dispersal potential of a hominin population, its local-...
Taking inspiration from the archaeology of the Texas Coastal Plain (TCP), we develop an ecological t...
As obligate tool users, humans habitually reconfigure resource distributions on landscapes. Such res...
Settlement patterns are one of the main products of the Stone Age archaeological research. Their em...
The residential mobility patterns of modern hunter-gatherers broadly reflect local resource availabi...
peer reviewedThe behavioural ecological approach to anthropology states that the density and distri...
In this paper we combine foraging theory and population biology models to simulate dynamic relations...
The study of hunter-gatherer mobility patterns is of vital importance to our understanding of the pa...
Residential mobility is a key aspect of hunter-gatherer foraging economies and therefore is an issue...
The spread of agriculture is a major driver of social and environmental change throughout the Holoce...
Variation in territory size, population density, and residential mobility among small scale hunting ...
Research on hunting and gathering peoples has given anthropologists a long-standing conceptual frame...
This paper constructs a formal spatial model of a hunter-gatherer economy. By assuming that resource...
In this paper we combine foraging theory and population biology models to simulate dynamic relations...
<div><p>Settlement size predicts extreme variation in the rates and magnitudes of many social and ec...
We investigated the relationship between the dispersal potential of a hominin population, its local-...
Taking inspiration from the archaeology of the Texas Coastal Plain (TCP), we develop an ecological t...
As obligate tool users, humans habitually reconfigure resource distributions on landscapes. Such res...
Settlement patterns are one of the main products of the Stone Age archaeological research. Their em...
The residential mobility patterns of modern hunter-gatherers broadly reflect local resource availabi...
peer reviewedThe behavioural ecological approach to anthropology states that the density and distri...
In this paper we combine foraging theory and population biology models to simulate dynamic relations...
The study of hunter-gatherer mobility patterns is of vital importance to our understanding of the pa...
Residential mobility is a key aspect of hunter-gatherer foraging economies and therefore is an issue...
The spread of agriculture is a major driver of social and environmental change throughout the Holoce...
Variation in territory size, population density, and residential mobility among small scale hunting ...
Research on hunting and gathering peoples has given anthropologists a long-standing conceptual frame...
This paper constructs a formal spatial model of a hunter-gatherer economy. By assuming that resource...
In this paper we combine foraging theory and population biology models to simulate dynamic relations...
<div><p>Settlement size predicts extreme variation in the rates and magnitudes of many social and ec...
We investigated the relationship between the dispersal potential of a hominin population, its local-...