From Tools to Symbols

£37.50

From Tools to Symbols

From Early Hominids to Modern Humans

Anthropology Archaeology

Authors: Francesco d'Errico, Lucinda Backwell, Bernard Malauzat, Bonny S. Williamson, Cedric Poggenpoel, Chantal Tribolo, Charles K. Brain, Christopher Henshilwood, Curtis W. Marean, David Lewis-Williams, Dominique Gommery, Francis Thackeray, Frederic Joulian, Geeske Langejans, Helen Kempson, Helene Valladas, Himla Soodyall, Jean-Philippe Rigaud, Joel Le Baron, John Parkington, Jose Braga, Edwin Cameron, Kathleen Kuman, Lee R. Berger, Luca Pollarolo, Marian Vanhaeren, Marie Soressi, Marion K. Bamford, Martin Pickford, Brigitte Senut, Morris Sutton, Nathan Schlanger, Nicholas J. Conard, Norbert Mercier, Phillip V. Tobias, Pierre-Jean Texier, Ryan Gibbon, Sandrine Prat, Sarah Wurz, Trefor Jenkins, Zenobia Jacobs

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Language: English

Published by: Wits University Press

Published on: 1 June 2005

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 33 Mb

ISBN: 9781776142293


Research on Early Hominid and Modern Human Populations

A number of researchers have tried to characterise the anatomy and behavioural systems of early hominid and early modern human populations in an attempt to understand how we became what we are. Can archaeology, palaeo-anthropology and genetics tell us how and when human cultures developed the traits that make our societies different from those of our closest living relatives?

In which cases are these differences substantial, and when do they simply reflect our definitions of culture, species, the image we have of their evolution or of ourselves? From Tools to Symbols, a collection of twenty-seven selected papers from a South African-French conference organised in honour of the well-known palaeo-anthropologist Phillip Tobias, provides a multidisciplinary overview of this field of study.

It is based on collaborative research conducted in sub-Saharan Africa by South African, French, American and German scholars in the last twenty years, and represents an excellent synthesis of the palaeontological and archaeological evidence of the last five million years of human evolution.

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