Stone Tools in Human Evolution

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Stone Tools in Human Evolution

Behavioral Differences among Technological Primates

Archaeology Archaeological theory Archaeology by period / region Archaeological science, methodology and techniques Anthropology

Author: John J. Shea

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Language: English

Published by: Cambridge University Press

Published on: 7th November 2016

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 17 Mb

ISBN: 9781316798638


In Stone Tools in Human Evolution

John J. Shea argues that over the last three million years hominins' technological strategies shifted from occasional tool use, much like that seen among living non-human primates, to a uniquely human pattern of obligatory tool use. Examining how the lithic archaeological record changed over the course of human evolution, he compares tool use by living humans and non-human primates and predicts how the archaeological stone tool evidence should have changed as distinctively human behaviors evolved.

Those behaviors include using cutting tools, logistical mobility (carrying things), language and symbolic artifacts, geographic dispersal and diaspora, and residential sedentism (living in the same place for prolonged periods). Shea then tests those predictions by analyzing the archaeological lithic record from 6,500 years ago to 3.5 million years ago.

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