- Paleolithic
-
The Paleolithic
↑ before Homo (Pliocene)
Lower Paleolithic (c. 2.6 Ma–100 ka)
- Oldowan (2.6–1.8 Ma)
- Acheulean (1.7–0.1 Ma)
- Clactonian (0.3–0.2 Ma)
Middle Paleolithic (300–30 ka)
- Mousterian (300–30 ka)
- Aterian (82 ka)
Upper Paleolithic (50–10 ka)
- Baradostian (36 ka)
- Châtelperronian (35–29 ka)
- Aurignacian (32–26 ka)
- Gravettian (28–22 ka)
- Solutrean (21–17 ka)
- Magdalenian (18–10 ka)
- Hamburg (14 ka)
- Ahrensberg (13 ka)
- Swiderian (10 ka)
↓ Mesolithic
↓ Stone AgeThe Paleolithic (or Palæolithic) Age, Era or Period, is a prehistoric period of human history distinguished by the development of the most primitive stone tools discovered (Modes I and II), and covers roughly 99% of human technological prehistory. It extends from the earliest known use of stone tools, probably by Hominins such as Australopithecines, 2.6 million years ago, to the end of the Pleistocene around 10,000 BP.[1] The Paleolithic era is followed by the Mesolithic. The date of the Paleolithic—Mesolithic boundary may vary by locality as much as several thousand years.
During the Paleolithic, humans grouped together in small societies such as bands, and subsisted by gathering plants and hunting or scavenging wild animals.[2] The Paleolithic is characterized by the use of knapped stone tools, although at the time humans also used wood and bone tools. Other organic commodities were adapted for use as tools, including leather and vegetable fibers; however, due to their nature, these have not been preserved to any great degree. Surviving artifacts of the Paleolithic era are known as paleoliths. Humankind gradually evolved from early members of the genus Homo such as Homo habilis — who used simple stone tools — into fully behaviorally and anatomically modern humans (Homo sapiens sapiens) during the Paleolithic era.[3] During the end of the Paleolithic, specifically the Middle and or Upper Paleolithic, humans began to produce the earliest works of art and engage in religious and spiritual behavior such as burial and ritual.[2][4][5][6] The climate during the Paleolithic consisted of a set of glacial and interglacial periods in which the climate periodically fluctuated between warm and cool temperatures.
The term Paleolithic was coined by archaeologist John Lubbock in 1865. It derives from Greek: παλαιός, palaios, "old"; and λίθος, lithos, "stone", literally meaning "old age of the stone" or "Old Stone Age."
One rich source of Paleothic artifacts has been the Euphrates river valley. Excavations started in the 1960s, when the Turkish government built the Keban dam on the river. The Keban historical salvage project was organized by Kemal Kurdas, then rector of Middle East Technical University, and a team of Turkish, American and Dutch archeologists led by Maurits van Loon excavated. Later more dams were built and salvage operations took place, unearthing settlements going back to the Paleolithic.
Contents
Human evolution
Main article: Human evolutionHuman evolution is the part of biological evolution concerning the emergence of humans as a distinct species.
Paleogeography and climate
Main articles: Pleistocene#Paleogeography and climate, Pliocene_climate, and Pliocene#PaleogeographyThe climate of the Paleolithic Period spanned two geologic epochs known as the Pliocene and the Pleistocene. Both of these epochs experienced important geographic and climatic changes that affected human societies.
During the Pliocene, continents continued to drift from possibly as far as 250 km from their present locations to positions only 70 km from their current location. South America became linked to North America through the Isthmus of Panama, bringing a nearly complete end to South America's distinctive marsupial fauna. The formation of the Isthmus had major consequences on global temperatures, because warm equatorial ocean currents were cut off, and the cold Arctic and Antarctic waters lowered temperatures in the now-isolated Atlantic Ocean. Central America formed completely during the Pliocene, allowing fauna from North and South America to leave their native habitats and colonize new areas.[7] Africa's collision with Asia created the Mediterranean Sea, cutting off the remnants of the Tethys Ocean. During the Pleistocene, the modern continents were essentially at their present positions; the tectonic plates on which they sit have probably moved at most 100 km from each other since the beginning of the period.[8]
Climates during the Pliocene became cooler and drier, and seasonal, similar to modern climates. Ice sheets grew on Antarctica. The formation of an Arctic ice cap around 3 Ma is signaled by an abrupt shift in oxygen isotope ratios and ice-rafted cobbles in the North Atlantic and North Pacific ocean beds.[9] Mid-latitude glaciation probably began before the end of the epoch. The global cooling that occurred during the Pliocene may have spurred on the disappearance of forests and the spread of grasslands and savannas.[7]
The Pleistocene climate was characterized by repeated glacial cycles during which continental glaciers pushed to the 40th parallel in some places. Four major glacial events have been identified, as well as many minor intervening events. A major event is a general glacial excursion, termed a "glacial". Glacials are separated by "interglacials". During a glacial, the glacier experiences minor advances and retreats. The minor excursion is a "stadial"; times between stadials are "interstadials". Each glacial advance tied up huge volumes of water in continental ice sheets 1500–3000 m deep, resulting in temporary sea level drops of 100 m or more over the entire surface of the Earth. During interglacial times, such as at present, drowned coastlines were common, mitigated by isostatic or other emergent motion of some regions.
The effects of glaciation were global. Antarctica was ice-bound throughout the Pleistocene and the preceding Pliocene. The Andes were covered in the south by the Patagonian ice cap. There were glaciers in New Zealand and Tasmania. The now decaying glaciers of Mount Kenya, Mount Kilimanjaro, and the Ruwenzori Range in east and central Africa were larger. Glaciers existed in the mountains of Ethiopia and to the west in the Atlas mountains. In the northern hemisphere, many glaciers fused into one. The Cordilleran ice sheet covered the North American northwest; the Laurentide covered the east. The Fenno-Scandian ice sheet covered northern Europe, including Great Britain; the Alpine ice sheet covered the Alps. Scattered domes stretched across Siberia and the Arctic shelf. The northern seas were frozen. During the late Upper Paleolithic (Latest Pleistocene) c. 18,000 BP, the Beringa land bridge between Asia and North America was blocked by ice,[8] which may have prevented early Paleo-Indians such as the Clovis culture from directly crossing Beringa to reach the Americas.
According to Mark Lynas (through collected data), the Pleistocene's overall climate could be characterized as a continuous El Niño with trade winds in the south Pacific weakening or heading east, warm air rising near Peru, warm water spreading from the west Pacific and the Indian Ocean to the east Pacific, and other El Niño markers.[10]
The ice age ended with the end of the Paleolithic era (the end of the Pleistocene epoch), and Earth's climate became warmer. This may have caused or contributed to the extinction of the Pleistocene megafauna, although it is also possible that the late Pleistocene extinctions were (at least in part) caused by other factors such as disease and over hunting by humans.[11][12] New research suggests that the extinction of the woolly mammoth may have been caused by the combined effect of climatic change and human hunting.[12] Scientists suggest that climate change during the end of the Pleistocene caused the mammoths' habitat to shrink in size, resulting in a drop in population. The small populations were then hunted out by Paleolithic humans.[12] The global warming that occurred during the end of the Pleistocene and the beginning of the Holocene may have made it easier for humans to reach mammoth habitats that were previously frozen and inaccessible.[12] Small populations of wooly mammoths survived on isolated Arctic islands, Saint Paul Island and Wrangel Island, till circa 3700 and 1700 BCE respectively. The Wrangel Island population went extinct around the same time the island was settled by prehistoric humans.[13] There's no evidence of prehistoric human presence on Saint Paul island (though early human settlements dating as far back as 6500 BCE were found on nearby Aleutian Islands).[14]
- Currently agreed upon classifications as Paleolithic geoclimatic episodes[15]
Age
(before)America Atlantic Europe Maghreb Mediterranean Europe Central Europe 10,000 years Flandrian interglacial Flandriense Mellahiense Versiliense Flandrian interglacial 80,000 years Wisconsin Devensiense Regresión Regresión Wisconsin Stage 140,000 years Sangamoniense Ipswichiense Ouljiense Tirreniense II y III Eemian Stage 200,000 years Illinois Wolstoniense Regresión Regresión Wolstonian Stage 450,000 years Yarmouthiense Hoxniense Anfatiense Tirreniense I Hoxnian Stage 580,000 years Kansas Angliense Regresión Regresión Kansan Stage 750,000 years Aftoniense Cromeriense Maarifiense Siciliense Cromerian Complex 1,100,000 years Nebraska Beestoniense Regresión Regresión Beestonian stage 1,400,000 years interglaciar Ludhamiense Messaudiense Calabriense Donau-Günz Human way of life
Due to a lack of written records from this time period, nearly all of our knowledge of Paleolithic human culture and way of life comes from archaeology and ethnographic comparisons to modern hunter-gatherer cultures such as the Kung San who live similarly to their Paleolithic predecessors.[16] The economy of a typical Paleolithic society was a hunter-gatherer economy.[17] Humans hunted wild animals for meat and gathered food, firewood, and materials for their tools, clothes, or shelters.[17] Human population density was very low, around only one person per square mile.[2] This was most likely due to low body fat, infanticide, women regularly engaging in intense endurance exercise,[18] late weaning of infants and a nomadic lifestyle.[2] Like contemporary hunter-gatherers, Paleolithic humans enjoyed an abundance of leisure time unparalleled in both Neolithic farming societies and modern industrial societies.[17][19] At the end of the Paleolithic, specifically the Middle and or Upper Paleolithic, humans began to produce works of art such as cave paintings, rock art and jewellery and began to engage in religious behavior such as burial and ritual.[20]
Technology
Paleolithic humans made tools of stone, bone, and wood.[17] The earliest Paleolithic stone tool industry, the Olduwan, was developed by the earliest members of the genus Homo such as Homo habilis, around 2.6 million years ago.[21] It contained tools such as choppers, burins and awls. It was completely replaced around 250,000 years ago by the more complex Acheulean industry, which was first conceived by Homo ergaster around 1.8 or 1.65 million years ago.[22] The most recent Lower Paleolithic (Acheulean) implements completely vanished from the archeological record around 100,000 years ago and were replaced by more complex Middle Paleolithic/Middle Stone Age tool kits such as the Mousterian and the Aterian industries.[23]
Lower Paleolithic humans used a variety of stone tools, including hand axes and choppers. Although they appear to have used hand axes often, there is disagreement about their use. Interpretations range from cutting and chopping tools, to digging implements, flake cores, the use in traps and a purely ritual significance, maybe in courting behavior. William H. Calvin has suggested that some hand axes could have served as "killer Frisbees" meant to be thrown at a herd of animals at a water hole so as to stun one of them. There are no indications of hafting, and some artifacts are far too large for that. Thus, a thrown hand axe would not usually have penetrated deeply enough to cause very serious injuries. Nevertheless, it could have been an effective weapon for defense against predators. Choppers and scrapers were likely used for skinning and butchering scavenged animals and sharp ended sticks were often obtained for digging up edible roots. Presumably, early humans used wooden spears as early as 5 million years ago to hunt small animals, much as their relatives, chimpanzees, have been observed to do in Senegal, Africa.[24] Lower Paleolithic humans constructed shelters such as the possible wood hut at Terra Amata.
Fire was used by the Lower Paleolithic hominid Homo erectus/Homo ergaster as early as 300,000 or 1.5 million years ago and possibly even earlier by the early Lower Paleolithic (Oldowan) hominid Homo habilis and/or by robust australopithecines such as Paranthropus.[2] However, the use of fire only became common in the societies of the following Middle Stone Age/Middle Paleolithic Period.[1] Use of fire reduced mortality rates and provided protection against predators.[25] Early hominids may have begun to cook their food as early as the Lower Paleolithic (c. 1.9 million years ago) or at the latest in the early Middle Paleolithic (c. 250,000 years ago).[26] Some scientists have hypothesized that Hominids began cooking food to defrost frozen meat, which would help ensure their survival in cold regions.[26]
The Lower Paleolithic hominid Homo erectus possibly invented rafts (c. 800,000 or 840,000 BP) to travel over large bodies of water, which may have allowed a group of Homo erectus to reach the island of Flores and evolve into the small hominid Homo floresiensis. However, this hypothesis is disputed within the anthropological community.[27][28][29] The possible use of rafts during the Lower Paleolithic may indicate that Lower Paleolithic Hominids such as Homo erectus were more advanced than previously believed, and may have even spoken an early form of modern language.[28] Supplementary evidence from Neanderthal and Modern human sites located around the Mediterranean Sea such as Coa de sa Multa (c. 300,000 BP) has also indicated that both Middle and Upper Paleolithic humans used rafts to travel over large bodies of water (i.e. the Mediterranean Sea) for the purpose of colonizing other bodies of land.[30][28]
Around 200,000 BP, Middle Paleolithic Stone tool manufacturing spawned a tool making technique known as the prepared-core technique, that was more elaborate than previous Acheulean techniques.[3] This technique increased efficiency by allowing the creation of more controlled and consistent flakes.[3] It allowed Middle Paleolithic humans to create stone tipped spears, which were the earliest composite tools, by hafting sharp, pointy stone flakes onto wooden shafts. In addition to improving tool making methods, the Middle Paleolithic also saw an improvement of the tools themselves that allowed access to a wider variety and amount of food sources. For example microliths or small stone tools or points were invented around 70,000 or 65,000 BP and were essential to the invention of bows and spear throwers in the following Upper Paleolithic period.[25] Harpoons were invented and used for the first time during the late Middle Paleolithic (c.90,000 years ago); the invention of these devices brought fish into the human diets, which provided a hedge against starvation and a more abundant food supply.[30][31] Thanks to their technology and their advanced social structures, Paleolithic groups such as the Neanderthals who had a Middle Paleolithic level of technology, appear to have hunted large game just as well as Upper Paleolithic modern humans[32] and the Neanderthals in particular may have likewise hunted with projectile weapons.[33] Nonetheless, Neanderthal use of projectile weapons in hunting occurred very rarely (or perhaps never) and the Neanderthals hunted large game animals mostly by ambushing them and attacking them with mêlée weapons such as thrusting spears rather than attacking them from a distance with projectile weapons.[20][34]
During the Upper Paleolithic, further inventions were made, such as the net (c. 22,000 or 29,000 BP)[25] bolas,[35] the spear thrower (c.30,000 BP), the bow and arrow (c. 25,000 or 30,000 BP)[2][36] and the oldest example of ceramic art, the Venus of Dolní Věstonice (c. 29,000–25,000 BP).[2] Early dogs were domesticated, sometime between 30,000 BP and 14,000 BP, presumably to aid in hunting.[37] However, the earliest instances of successful domestication of dogs may be much more ancient than this. Evidence from canine DNA collected by Robert K. Wayne suggests that dogs may have been first domesticated in the late Middle Paleolithic around 100,000 BP or perhaps even earlier.[38] Archeological evidence from the Dordogne region of France demonstrates that members of the European early Upper Paleolithic culture known as the Aurignacian used calendars (c. 30,000 BP). This was a lunar calendar that was used to document the phases of the moon. Genuine solar calendars did not appear until the following Neolithic period.[39] It is almost certain that Upper Paleolithic cultures could precisely time the migration of game animals such as wild horses and deer.[31] This ability allowed humans to become efficient hunters and to exploit a wide variety of game animals.[31] Recent research indicates that the Neanderthals timed their hunts and the migrations of game animals long before the beginning of the Upper Paleolithic.[32]
Social organization
The social organization of the earliest Paleolithic (Lower Paleolithic) societies remains largely unknown to scientists, though Lower Paleolithic hominids such as Homo habilis and Homo erectus are likely to have had more complex social structures than chimpanzee societies.[40] Late Oldowan/Early Acheulean humans such as Homo ergaster/Homo erectus may have been the first people to invent central campsites or home bases and incorporate them into their foraging and hunting strategies like contemporary hunter-gatherers, possibly as early as 1.7 million years ago;[3] however, the earliest solid evidence for the existence of home bases or central campsites (hearths and shelters) among humans only dates back to 500,000 years ago.[3]
Similarly, scientists disagree whether Lower Paleolithic humans were largely monogamous or polygamous.[40] In particular, the Provisional model suggests that bipedalism arose in Pre Paleolithic australopithecine societies as an adaptation to monogamous lifestyles; however, other researchers note that sexual dimorphism is more pronounced in Lower Paleolithic humans such as Homo erectus than in Modern humans, who are less polygamous than other primates, which suggests that Lower Paleolithic humans had a largely polygamous lifestyle, because species that have the most pronounced sexual dimorphism tend more likely to be polygamous.[41]
Human societies from the Paleolithic to the early Neolithic farming tribes lived without states and organized governments. For most of the Lower Paleolithic, human societies were possibly more hierarchical than their Middle and Upper Paleolithic descendants, and probably were not grouped into bands,[42] though during the end of the Lower Paleolithic, the latest populations of the hominid Homo erectus may have begun living in small-scale (possibly egalitarian) bands similar to both Middle and Upper Paleolithic societies and modern hunter-gatherers.[42]
Middle Paleolithic societies, unlike Lower Paleolithic and early Neolithic ones, consisted of bands that ranged from 20 to 30 or 25 to 100 members and were usually nomadic.[2][42][43] These bands were formed by several families. Bands sometimes joined together into larger "macrobands" for activities such as acquiring mates and celebrations or where resources were abundant.[2] By the end of the Paleolithic era, about 10,000 BP people began to settle down into permanent locations, and began to rely on agriculture for sustenance in many locations. Much evidence exists that humans took part in long-distance trade between bands for rare commodities (such as ochre, which was often used for religious purposes such as ritual[44][45]) and raw materials, as early as 120,000 years ago in Middle Paleolithic.[20] Inter-band trade may have appeared during the Middle Paleolithic because trade between bands would have helped ensure their survival by allowing them to exchange resources and commodities such as raw materials during times of relative scarcity (i.e. famine, drought).[20] Like in modern hunter-gatherer societies, individuals in Paleolithic societies may have been subordinate to the band as a whole.[16][17] Both Neanderthals and modern humans took care of the elderly members of their societies during the Middle and Upper Paleolithic.[20]
Some sources claim that most Middle and Upper Paleolithic societies were possibly fundamentally egalitarian[2][30][17][42][42] and may have rarely or never engaged in organized violence between groups (i.e. war).[30][46][47][48] Some Upper Paleolithic societies in resource-rich environments (such as societies in Sungir, in what is now Russia) may have had more complex and hierarchical organization (such as tribes with a pronounced hierarchy and a somewhat formal division of labor) and may have engaged in endemic warfare.[30][49] Some argue that there was no formal leadership during the Middle and Upper Paleolithic. Like contemporary egalitarian hunter-gatherers such as the Mbuti pygmies, societies may have made decisions by communal consensus decision making rather than by appointing permanent rulers such as chiefs and monarchs.[5] Nor was there a formal division of labor during the Paleolithic. Each member of the group was skilled at all tasks essential to survival, regardless of individual abilities. Theories to explain the apparent egalitarianism have arisen, notably the Marxist concept of primitive communism.[50][51] Christopher Boehm (1999) has hypothesized that egalitarianism may have evolved in Paleolithic societies because of a need to distribute resources such as food and meat equally to avoid famine and ensure a stable food supply.[42] Raymond C. Kelly speculates that the relative peacefulness of Middle and Upper Paleolithic societies resulted from a low population density, cooperative relationships between groups such as reciprocal exchange of commodities and collaboration on hunting expeditions, and because the invention of projectile weapons such as throwing spears provided less incentive for war, because they increased the damage done to the attacker and decreased the relative amount of territory attackers could gain.[48] However, other sources claim that most Paleolithic groups may have been larger, more complex, sedentary and warlike than most contemporary hunter-gatherer societies, due to occupying more resource-abundant areas than most modern hunter-gatherers who have been pushed into more marginal habitats by agricultural societies.[52]
Anthropologists have typically assumed that in Paleolithic societies, women were responsible for gathering wild plants and firewood, and men were responsible for hunting and scavenging dead animals.[2][30] However, analogies to existent hunter-gatherer societies such as the Hadza people and the Australian aborigines suggest that the sexual division of labor in the Paleolithic was relatively flexible. Men may have participated in gathering plants, firewood and insects, and women may have procured small game animals for consumption and assisted men in driving herds of large game animals (such as woolly mammoths and deer) off cliffs.[30][47] Additionally, recent research by anthropologist and archaeologist Steven Kuhn from the University of Arizona shows that this division of labor did not exist prior to the Upper Paleolithic and was invented relatively recently in human pre-history.[53][54] Sexual division of labor may have been developed to allow humans to acquire food and other resources more efficiently.[54] Possibly there was approximate parity between men and women during the Middle and Upper Paleolithic, and that period may have been the most gender-equal time in human history.[43][46][55][56] Archeological evidence from art and funerary rituals indicates that a number of individual women enjoyed seemingly high status in their communities,[56] and it is likely that both sexes participated in decision making.[43] The earliest known Paleolithic shaman (c. 30,000 BP) was female.[57] Jared Diamond suggests that the status of women declined with the adoption of agriculture because women in farming societies typically have more pregnancies and are expected to do more demanding work than women in hunter-gatherer societies.[58] Like most contemporary hunter-gatherer societies, Paleolithic and the Mesolithic groups probably followed mostly matrilineal and ambilineal descent patterns; patrilineal descent patterns were probably rarer than in the following Neolithic period.[25][45]
Art and music
Early examples of artistic expression, such as the Venus of Tan-Tan and the patterns found on elephant bones from Bilzingsleben in Thuringia, may have been produced by Acheulean tool users such as Homo erectus prior to the start of the Middle Paleolithic period. However, the earliest undisputed evidence of art during the Paleolithic period comes from Middle Paleolithic/Middle Stone Age sites such as Blombos Cave in the form of bracelets,[59] beads,[60] rock art,[44] and ochre used as body paint and perhaps in ritual.[30][44] Undisputed evidence of art only becomes common in the following Upper Paleolithic period.[61]
According to Robert G. Bednarik, Lower Paleolithic Acheulean tool users began to engage in symbolic behavior such as art around 850,000 BP and decorated themselves with beads and collected exotic stones for aesthetic rather than utilitarian qualities.[62] According to Bednarik, traces of the pigment ochre from late Lower Paleolithic Acheulean archeological sites suggests that Acheulean societies, like later Upper Paleolithic societies, collected and used ochre to create rock art.[62] Nevertheless, it is also possible that the ochre traces found at Lower Paleolithic sites is naturally occurring.[63]
Vincent W. Fallio interprets Lower and Middle Paleolithic marking on rocks at sites such as Bilzingsleben (such as zig zagging lines) as accounts or representation of altered states of consciousness[64] though some other scholars interpret them as either simple doodling or as the result of natural processes.
Upper Paleolithic humans produced works of art such as cave paintings, Venus figurines, animal carvings and rock paintings.[31] Upper Paleolithic art can be divided into two broad categories: figurative art such as cave paintings that clearly depicts animals (or more rarely humans); and nonfigurative, which consists of shapes and symbols.[31] Cave paintings have been interpreted in a number of ways by modern archeologists. The earliest explanation, by the prehistorian Abbe Breuil, interpreted the paintings as a form of magic designed to ensure a successful hunt.[65] However, this hypothesis fails to explain the existence of animals such as saber-toothed cats and lions, which were not hunted for food, and the existence of half-human, half-animal beings in cave paintings. The anthropologist David Lewis-Williams has suggested that Paleolithic cave paintings were indications of shamanistic practices, because the paintings of half-human, half-animal paintings and the remoteness of the caves are reminiscent of modern hunter-gatherer shamanistic practices.[65] Symbol-like images are more common in Paleolithic cave paintings than are depictions of animals or humans, and unique symbolic patterns might have been trademarks that represent different Upper Paleolithic ethnic groups.[66] Venus figurines have evoked similar controversy. Archeologists and anthropologists have described the figurines as representations of goddesses, pornographic imagery, apotropaic amulets used for sympathetic magic, and even as self-portraits of women themselves.[30][67]
R. Dale Guthrie[68] has studied not only the most artistic and publicized paintings, but also a variety of lower-quality art and figurines, and he identifies a wide range of skill and ages among the artists. He also points out that the main themes in the paintings and other artifacts (powerful beasts, risky hunting scenes and the over-sexual representation of women) are to be expected in the fantasies of adolescent males during the Upper Paleolithic.
The Venus figurines have sometimes been interpreted as representing a mother goddess; the abundance of such female imagery has led some to believe that Upper Paleolithic (and later Neolithic) societies had a female-centered religion and a female-dominated society. For example, this was proposed by the archeologist Marija Gimbutas and the feminist scholar Merlin Stone who was the author of the 1978 book When God Was a Woman[69][70] Various other explanations for the purpose of the figurines have been proposed, such as Catherine McCoid and LeRoy McDermott’s hypothesis that the figurines were created as self portraits of actual women[67] and R.Dale Gutrie's hypothesis that the venus figurines represented a kind of "stone age pornography".
The origins of music during the Paleolithic are unknown, since the earliest forms of music probably did not use musical instruments but instead used the human voice and or natural objects such as rocks, which leave no trace in the archaeological record. However, the anthropological and archeological designation suggests that human music first arose when language, art and other modern behaviors developed in the Middle or the Upper Paleolithic period. Music may have developed from rhythmic sounds produced by daily activities such as cracking nuts by hitting them with stones, because maintaining a rhythm while working may have helped people to become more efficient at daily activities.[71] An alternative theory originally proposed by Charles Darwin explains that music may have begun as a hominid mating strategy as many birds and some other animals produce music like calls to attract mates.[72] This hypothesis is generally less accepted than the previous hypothesis, but it nonetheless provides a possible alternative.
Upper Paleolithic (and possibly Middle Paleolithic[73]) humans used flute-like bone pipes as musical instruments,[30][74] Music may have played a large role in the religious lives of Upper Paleolithic hunter-gatherers. Like in modern hunter-gatherer societies, music may have been used in ritual or to help induce trances. In particular, it appears that animal skin drums may have been used in religious events by Upper Paleolithic shamans, as shown by the remains of drum-like instruments from some Upper Paleolithic graves of shamans and the ethnographic record of contemporary hunter-gatherer shamanic and ritual practices.[31][57]
Religion and beliefs
Main article: Paleolithic ReligionThe established anthropological view is that it is more probable that humankind first developed religious and spiritual beliefs during the Middle Paleolithic or Upper Paleolithic.[75] Controversial scholars of prehistoric religion and anthropology, James Harrod and Vincent W. Fallio, have recently proposed that religion and spirituality (and art) may have first arisen in Pre-Paleolithic chimpanzees[76] or Early Lower Paleolithic (Oldowan) societies.[64][77] According to Fallio, the common ancestor of chimpanzees and humans experienced altered states of consciousness and partook in ritual, and ritual was used in their societies to strengthen social bonding and group cohesion.[64]
Middle Paleolithic humans' use of burials at sites such as Krapina, Croatia (c. 130,000 BP) and Qafzeh, Israel (c. 100,000 BP) have led some anthropologists and archeologists, such as Philip Lieberman, to believe that Middle Paleolithic humans may have possessed a belief in an afterlife and a "concern for the dead that transcends daily life".[78] Cut marks on Neanderthal bones from various sites, such as Combe-Grenal and Abri Moula in France, suggest that the Neanderthals like some contemporary human cultures may have practiced ritual defleshing for (presumably) religious reasons. According to recent archeological findings from H. heidelbergensis sites in Atapuerca, humans may have begun burying their dead much earlier, during the late Lower Paleolithic; but this theory is widely questioned in the scientific community.
Likewise, some scientists have proposed that Middle Paleolithic societies such as Neanderthal societies may also have practiced the earliest form of totemism or animal worship, in addition to their (presumably religious) burial of the dead. In particular, Emil Bächler suggested (based on archeological evidence from Middle Paleolithic caves) that a bear cult was widespread among Middle Paleolithic Neanderthals.[79] A claim that evidence was found for Middle Paleolithic animal worship c 70,000 BCE originates from the Tsodilo Hills in the African Kalahari desert has been denied by the original investigators of the site.[6][80] Animal cults in the following Upper Paleolithic period, such as the bear cult, may have had their origins in these hypothetical Middle Paleolithic animal cults.[81] Animal worship during the Upper Paleolithic was intertwined with hunting rites.[81] For instance, archeological evidence from art and bear remains reveals that the bear cult apparently involved a type of sacrificial bear ceremonialism, in which a bear was sliced with arrows, finished off by a blast in the lungs, and ritualistically worshipped near a clay bear statue covered by a bear fur with the skull and the body of the bear buried separately.[81] Barbara Ehrenreich controversially theorizes that the sacrificial hunting rites of the Upper Paleolithic (and by extension Paleolithic cooperative big-game hunting) gave rise to war or warlike raiding during the following Epi-Paleolithic/Mesolithic or late Upper Paleolithic period.[47]
The existence of anthropomorphic images and half-human, half-animal images in the Upper Paleolithic period may further indicate that Upper Paleolithic humans were the first people to believe in a pantheon of gods or supernatural beings,[82] though such images may instead indicate shamanistic practices similar to those of contemporary tribal societies.[65] The earliest known undisputed burial of a shaman (and by extension the earliest undisputed evidence of shamans and shamanic practices) dates back to the early Upper Paleolithic era (c. 30,000 BP) in what is now the Czech Republic.[57] However, during the early Upper Paleolithic it was probably more common for all members of the band to participate equally and fully in religious ceremonies, in contrast to the religious traditions of later periods when religious authorities and part-time ritual specialists such as shamans, priests and medicine men were relatively common and integral to religious life.[17] Additionally, it is also possible that Upper Paleolithic religions, like contemporary and historical animistic and polytheistic religions, believed in the existence of a single creator deity in addition to other supernatural beings such as animistic spirits.[83]
Vincent W. Fallio writes that ancestor cults first emerged in complex Upper Paleolithic societies. He argues that the elites of these societies (like the elites of many more contemporary complex hunter-gatherers such as the Tlingit) may have used special rituals and ancestor worship to solidify control over their societies, by convincing their subjects that they possess a link to the spirit world that also gives them control over the earthly realm.[64] Secret societies may have served a similar function in these complex quasi-theocratic societies, by dividing the religious practices of these cultures into the separate spheres of Popular Religion and Elite Religion.[64]
Religion was possibly apotropaic; specifically, it may have involved sympathetic magic.[30] The Venus figurines, which are abundant in the Upper Paleolithic archeological record, provide an example of possible Paleolithic sympathetic magic, as they may have been used for ensuring success in hunting and to bring about fertility of the land and women.[2] The Upper Paleolithic Venus figurines have sometimes been explained as depictions of an earth goddess similar to Gaia, or as representations of a goddess who is the ruler or mother of the animals.[81][84] James Harrod has described them as representative of female (and male) shamanistic spiritual transformation processes.[85]
Diet and nutrition
Paleolithic hunting and gathering peoples ate primarily meat, fish, shellfish, leafy vegetables, fruit, nuts and insects in varying proportions.[87][88] However, there is little direct evidence of the relative proportions of plant and animal foods.[89] Although the term "paleolithic diet", without references to a specific timeframe or locale, is sometimes used with an implication that most humans shared a certain diet during the entire era, that is not entirely accurate. The Paleolithic was an extended period of time, during which multiple technological advances were made, many of which had impact on human dietary structure. For example, it is almost undisputed (with only a few scholars adopting the divergent view) that, for much of the Paleolithic, humans did not possess the control of fire, or tools necessary to engage in extensive fishing. On the other hand, both these technologies are generally agreed to have been widely available to humans by the end of the Paleolithic (consequently, allowing humans in some regions of the planet to rely heavily on fishing and hunting). In addition, the Paleolithic involved a substantial geographical expansion of human populations. During the Lower Paleolithic, ancestors of modern humans are thought to have been constrained to Africa east of the Great Rift Valley. During the Middle and Upper Paleolithic, humans greatly expanded their area of settlement, reaching ecosystems as diverse as New Guinea and Alaska, and adapting their diets to whatever local resources available.
According to some anthropologists and advocates of the modern Paleolithic diet, Paleolithic hunter-gatherers consumed a significant amount of meat and possibly obtained most of their food from hunting.[90] Competing hypotheses suggest that Paleolithic humans may have consumed a plant-based diet in general,[53] or that hunting and gathering possibly contributed equally to their diet.[91] One hypothesis is that carbohydrate tubers (plant underground storage organs) may have been eaten in high amounts by pre-agricultural humans.[92][93][94][95] The relative proportions of plant and animal foods in the diets of Paleolithic peoples probably varied between regions, with more meat being necessary in colder regions (which weren't populated by anatomically modern humans till 30,000-50,000 BP).[96] It is generally agreed that many modern hunting and fishing tools, such as fish hooks, nets, bows, and poisons, weren't introduced until the Upper Paleolithic and possibly even Neolithic.[25] The only hunting tools widely available to humans during any significant part of the Paleolithic period were hand-held spears and harpoons. There's evidence of Paleolithic people killing and eating seals and elands as far as 100,000 years BP. On the other hand, buffalo bones found in African caves from the same period are typically of very young or very old individuals, and there's no evidence that pigs, elephants or rhinos were hunted by humans at the time.[97]
Overall, Paleolithic peoples experienced less famine and malnutrition than the Neolithic farming tribes that followed them.[16][98] This was partly because Paleolithic hunter-gatherers had access to a wider variety of plants and other foods, which allowed them a more nutritious diet and a decreased risk of famine.[16][18][58] Many of the famines experienced by Neolithic (and some modern) farmers were caused or amplified by their dependence on a small number of crops.[16][18][58] The greater amount of meat obtained by hunting big game animals in Paleolithic diets than in Mesolithic and Neolithic diets may have also allowed Paleolithic Hunter-gatherers to enjoy a more nutritious diet than both Epipaleolithic/Mesolithic hunter-gatherers and Neolithic agriculturalists.[98] It is also unlikely that Paleolithic hunter-gatherers were affected by modern diseases of affluence and extended life such as Type 2 diabetes, coronary heart disease and cerebrovascular disease, because they ate mostly lean meats and plants and frequently engaged in intense physical activity [99][100], and because the average lifespan was shorter than the age of common-onset of these conditions.[101][102]
Large-seeded legumes were part of the human diet long before the Neolithic agricultural revolution, as evident from archaeobotanical finds from the Mousterian layers of Kebara Cave, in Israel.[103] Moreover, recent evidence indicates that humans processed and consumed wild cereal grains as far back as 23,000 years ago in the Upper Paleolithic.[104] However, seeds, such as grains and beans, were rarely eaten and never in large quantities on a daily basis.[105] Recent archeological evidence also indicates that winemaking may have originated in the Paleolithic, when early humans drank the juice of naturally fermented wild grapes from animal-skin pouches.[86] Paleolithic humans consumed animal organ meats, including the livers, kidneys and brains. Upper Paleolithic cultures appear to have had significant knowledge about plants and herbs and may have, albeit very rarely, practiced rudimentary forms of horticulture.[106] In particular, bananas and tubers may have been cultivated as early as 25,000 BP in southeast Asia.[52] Late Upper Paleolithic societies also appear to have occasionally practiced pastoralism and animal husbandry, presumably for dietary reasons. For instance, some European late Upper Paleolithic cultures domesticated and raised reindeer, presumably for their meat or milk, as early as 14,000 BP.[37] Humans also probably consumed hallucinogenic plants during the Paleolithic period.[2] The Australian Aborigines have been consuming a variety of native animal and plant foods, called bushfood, for an estimated 60,000 years, since the Middle Paleolithic.
People during the Middle Paleolithic, such as the Neanderthals and Middle Paleolithic Homo sapiens in Africa, began to catch shellfish for food as revealed by shellfish cooking in Neanderthal sites in Italy about 110,000 years ago and Middle Paleolithic Homo sapiens sites at Pinnacle Point, in Africa around 164,000 BP.[30][107] Although fishing only became common during the Upper Paleolithic,[30][108] fish have been part of human diets long before the dawn of the Upper Paleolithic and have certainly been consumed by humans since at least the Middle Paleolithic.[31] For example, the Middle Paleolithic Homo sapiens in the region now occupied by the Democratic Republic of the Congo hunted large 6-foot (1.8 m)-long catfish with specialized barbed fishing points as early as 90,000 years ago.[30][31] The invention of fishing allowed some Upper Paleolithic and later hunter-gatherer societies to become sedentary or semi-nomadic, which altered their social structures.[74] Example societies are the Lepenski Vir as well as some contemporary hunter-gatherers such as the Tlingit. In some instances (at least the Tlingit) they developed social stratification, slavery and complex social structures such as chiefdoms.[25]
Anthropologists such as Tim White suggest that cannibalism was common in human societies prior to the beginning of the Upper Paleolithic, based on the large amount of “butchered human" bones found in Neanderthal and other Lower/Middle Paleolithic sites.[109] Cannibalism in the Lower and Middle Paleolithic may have occurred because of food shortages.[110] However, it may have been for religious reasons, and would coincide with the development of religious practices thought to have occurred during the Upper Paleolithic.[111][81] Nonetheless, it remains possible that Paleolithic societies never practiced cannibalism, and that the damage to recovered human bones was either the result of ritual post-mortem bone cleaning or predation by carnivores such as saber tooth cats, lions and hyenas.[81]
Events
- c. 10500 BCE - Paleo-Indians reach the Tierra del Fuego.
See also
- Abbassia Pluvial
- Caveman
- Japanese Paleolithic
- Lascaux
- Late Glacial Maximum
- List of archaeological sites by continent and age#Palaeolithic
- Luzia Woman
- Models of migration to the New World
- Mousterian Pluvial
- Palaeoarchaeology
- Turkana Boy
- Year
Footnotes
- ^ a b Toth, Nicholas; Schick, Kathy (2007). "21 Overview of Paleolithic Archaeology". In Henke, H.C. Winfried; Hardt, Thorolf; Tattersall, Ian. Handbook of Paleoanthropology. Volume 3. Berlin; Heidelberg; New York: Springer-Verlag. p. 1944. ISBN 978-3-540-32474-4 (Print); 978-3-540-33761-4 (Online). http://www.springerlink.com/content/u68378621542472j/
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m McClellan (2006). Science and Technology in World History: An Introduction. Baltimore, Maryland: JHU Press. ISBN 0801883601. http://books.google.com/?id=aJgp94zNwNQC&printsec=frontcover#PPA11. Page 6–12
- ^ a b c d e "Human Evolution," Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2007 Contributed by Richard B. Potts, B.A., Ph.D.
- ^ Phillip Lieberman (1991). Uniquely Human. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674921836. http://books.google.com/?id=3tS2MULo5rYC&pg=PA162&dq=Uniquely+Human+cognitive-linguistic+base.
- ^ a b Kusimba, Sibel (2003). African Foragers: Environment, Technology, Interactions. Rowman Altamira. p. 285. ISBN 075910154X. http://books.google.com/?id=xCa5zfefWVUC&printsec=frontcover&vq=Middle+Paleolithic.
- ^ a b World's Oldest Ritual Discovered -- Worshipped The Python 70,000 Years Ago The Research Council of Norway (2006, November 30). World's Oldest Ritual Discovered -- Worshipped The Python 70,000 Years Ago. ScienceDaily. Retrieved March 2, 2008, from http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/11/061130081347.htm
- ^ a b "University of California Museum of Paleontology website the Pliocene epoch(accessed March 25)". Ucmp.berkeley.edu. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/tertiary/pli.html. Retrieved 2010-01-31.
- ^ a b Christopher Scotese. "Paleomap project". The Earth has been in an Ice House Climate for the last 30 million years. http://www.scotese.com/lastice.htm. Retrieved 2008-03-23.
- ^ Van Andel, Tjeerd H. (1994). New Views on an Old Planet: A History of Global Change.. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 454 pp.. ISBN 0-521-44243-5.
- ^ National Geographic Channel, Six Degrees Could Change The World, Mark Lynas interview. Retrieved February 14, 2008.
- ^ "University of California Museum of Paleontology website the Pleistocene epoch(accessed March 25)". Ucmp.berkeley.edu. http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/quaternary/ple.html. Retrieved 2010-01-31.
- ^ a b c d Kimberly Johnson. "National geographic news". Climate Change, Then Humans, Drove Mammoths Extinct from National geographic. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2008/04/080401-mammoth-extinction.html. Retrieved 2008-04-04.
- ^ Nowak, Ronald M. (1999). Walker's Mammals of the World. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0801857899.
- ^ "Phylogeographic Analysis of the mid-Holocene Mammoth from Qagnax Cave, St. Paul Island, Alaska". https://www.cfa.harvard.edu/~wsoon/HoloceneClimate+Optimum10-d/Enketal09-midHoloceneMammothStPaulIslandAlaska.pdf.
- ^ Gamble, Clive (1990), El poblamiento Paleolítico de Europa, Barcelona: Editorial Crítica. ISBN 84-7423-445-X.
- ^ a b c d e Leften Stavros Stavrianos (1997). Lifelines from Our Past: A New World History. New Jersey, USA: M.E. Sharpe. ISBN 0133570053. http://books.google.com/?id=9H6oqN3Q-GoC&pg=PA55&dq=Paleolithic+egalitarianism. Page 70
- ^ a b c d e f g Leften Stavros Stavrianos (1991). A Global History from Prehistory to the Present. New Jersey, USA: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0133570053. http://books.google.com/?id=MKhe6qNva10C&q=paleolithic+society&dq=paleolithic+society. Pages 9–13
- ^ a b c "The Consequences of Domestication and Sedentism by Emily Schultz, et al". Primitivism.com. http://www.primitivism.com/sedentism.htm. Retrieved 2010-01-31.
- ^ Felipe Fernandez Armesto (2003). Ideas that changed the world. Newyork: Dorling Kindersley limited. p. 400. ISBN 978-0-7566-3298-4.; Page 10
- ^ a b c d e Hillary Mayell. "When Did "Modern" Behavior Emerge in Humans?". National Geographic News. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/02/0220_030220_humanorigins2_2.html. Retrieved 2008-02-05.
- ^ Klein, R. (1999). The Human Career. University of Chicago Press.
- ^ Roche H et al., 2002, Les sites archaéologiques pio-pléistocènes de la formation de Nachuku 663–673, qtd in Scarre, 2005
- ^ Clark, JD, Variability in primary and secondary technologies of the Later Acheulian in Africa in Milliken, S and Cook, J (eds), 2001
- ^ Rick Weiss, "Chimps Observed Making Their Own Weapons", The Washington Post, February 22, 2007
- ^ a b c d e f Marlowe FW (2005). "Hunter-gatherers and human evolution" (PDF). Evolutionary Anthropology 14 (2): 15294. doi:10.1002/evan.20046. http://www.anthro.fsu.edu/people/faculty/marlowe_pubs/hunter-gatherers%20and%20human%20evolution.pdf.
- ^ a b Wrangham R, Conklin-Brittain N. (2003 September). "Cooking as a biological trait" (PDF). Comp Biochem Physiol a Mol Integr Physiol 136 (1): 35–46. doi:10.1016/S1095-6433(03)00020-5. PMID 14527628. http://anthropology.tamu.edu/faculty/alvard/anth630/reading/Week%208%20Diet%20tubers/Wrangham%20and%20Conklin-Brittain%202003.pdf.
- ^ Erectus Ahoy Prehistoric seafaring floats into view[dead link]
- ^ a b c "First Mariners Project Photo Gallery 1". Mc2.vicnet.net.au. http://mc2.vicnet.net.au/home/mariners/web/mariner1.html. Retrieved 2010-01-31.
- ^ "First Mariners - National Geographic project 2004". Mc2.vicnet.net.au. 2004-10-02. http://mc2.vicnet.net.au/home/mariners/web/ng2004.html. Retrieved 2010-01-31.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Miller, Barbra; Bernard Wood, Andrew Balansky, Julio Mercader, Melissa Panger (2006). Anthropology. Boston Massachusetts: Allyn and Bacon. p. 768. ISBN 0205320244.
- ^ a b c d e f g h "Human Evolution," Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2007 Contributed by Richard B. Potts, B.A., Ph.D.
- ^ a b Ann Parson. "Neanderthals Hunted as Well as Humans, Study Says". National Geographic News. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/01/0125_060125_neanderthal.html. Retrieved 2008-02-01.
- ^ Boëda E., Geneste J.M., Griggo C., Mercier N., Muhesen S., Reyss J.L., Taha A. & Valladas H. (1999) A Levallois point embedded in the vertebra of a wild ass (Equus africanus): Hafting, projectiles and Mousterian hunting. Antiquity, 73, 394–402
- ^ Cameron Balbirnie (2005-02-10). "The icy truth behind Neanderthals". BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/4251299.stm. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
- ^ J. Chavaillon, D. Lavallée, « Bola », in Dictionnaire de la Préhistoire, PUF, 1988.
- ^ "Archery," Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2007[dead link]
- ^ a b Lloyd, J & Mitchinson, J: "The Book of General Ignorance". Faber & Faber, 2006.
- ^ Christine Mellot. "stalking the ancient dog" (PDF). Science news. http://www.sciencenews.org/pages/pdfs/data/1997/151-26/15126-11.pdf. Retrieved 2008-01-03.
- ^ Felipe Fernandez Armesto (2003). Ideas that changed the world. New York: Dorling Kindersley limited. p. 400. ISBN 978-0-7566-3298-4.; [1]
- ^ a b Nancy White. "Intro to archeology The First People and Culture". Introduction to archeology. http://www.indiana.edu/~arch/saa/matrix/ia/ia03_mod_10.html. Retrieved 2008-03-20.
- ^ James Urquhart (2007-08-08). "Finds test human origins theory". BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/6937476.stm. Retrieved 2008-03-20.
- ^ a b c d e f Christopher Boehm (1999) "Hierarchy in the Forest: The Evolution of Egalitarian Behavior" page 198–208 Harvard University Press
- ^ a b c Jackson J. Spielvogel (2003). Western Civilization (combined volumes). Stamford Connecticut: Thomson Wadsworth. ISBN 0534646026. http://books.google.com/?id=ni4PSpOxb6MC&printsec=frontcover#PPA2,M1. Pages 2–3
- ^ a b c Sean Henahan. "Blombos Cave art". Science News. http://www.accessexcellence.org/WN/SU/caveart.html. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
- ^ a b Felipe Fernandez Armesto (2003). Ideas that changed the world. Newyork: Dorling Kindersley limited. p. 400. ISBN 978-0-7566-3298-4.; [2]
- ^ a b R Dale Gutrie (2005). The Nature of Paleolithic art. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0226311260. http://books.google.com/?id=3u6JNwMyMCEC&pg=PA428&dq=Paleolithic+religions. Pages 420-422
- ^ a b c Barbara Ehrenreich (1997). Blood Rites: Origins and History of the Passions of War. London, United Kingdom: Macmillan. ISBN 0805057870. http://books.google.com/?id=nFuDltu509YC&printsec=frontcover#PPA123,M1. Page 123
- ^ a b Kelly, Raymond (October 2005). "The evolution of lethal intergroup violence". PNAS 102 (43): 15294–8. doi:10.1073/pnas.0505955102. PMC 1266108. PMID 16129826. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=1266108.
- ^ Kelly, Raymond C. Warless societies and the origin of war. Ann Arbor : University of Michigan Press, 2000.
- ^ Marx, Karl; Friedrich Engels (1848). The Communist Manifesto. London. p. 87. ISBN 9781599869957. http://books.google.com/?id=TiKKmyacAiAC&pg=PA71&vq=Primitive+communism. Page 71
- ^ Stephen Henry Rigby (1999). Marxism and History: A Critical Introduction. Manchester Connecticut. p. 314. ISBN 0719056128. http://books.google.com/?id=6wFHth05xkoC&pg=PA111&dq=primitive+communism. Page 111
- ^ a b Thomas M. Kiefer (Spring 2002). "Anthropology E-20". Lecture 8 Subsistence, Ecology and Food production. Harvard University. http://www.suluarchipelago.com/E20Website2002/default.htm. Retrieved 2008-03-11.
- ^ a b Dahlberg, Frances (1975). Woman the Gatherer. London: Yale university press. ISBN 0-30-02989-6. http://books.google.com/?id=eTPULzP1MZAC&pg=PA120&dq=Gathering+and+Hominid+Adaptation.
- ^ a b Stefan Lovgren. "Sex-Based Roles Gave Modern Humans an Edge, Study Says". National Geographic News. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/12/061207-sex-humans.html. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
- ^ Leften Stavros Stavrianos (1991). A Global History from Prehistory to the Present. New Jersey, USA: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0133570053. http://books.google.com/?id=MKhe6qNva10C&q=paleolithic+society&dq=paleolithic+society. ""the sexes were more equal during Paleolithic millennia than at any time since."" Page 9
- ^ a b Museum of Antiquites web site . Retrieved February 13, 2008.
- ^ a b c Tedlock, Barbara. 2005. The Woman in the Shaman's Body: Reclaiming the Feminine in Religion and Medicine. New York: Bantam.
- ^ a b c Jared Diamond. "The Worst Mistake in the History of the Human Race". Discover. http://www.awok.org/worst-mistake/. Retrieved 2008-01-14.
- ^ Jonathan Amos (2004-04-15). "Cave yields 'earliest jewellery'". BBC News. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3629559.stm. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
- ^ Hillary Mayell. "Oldest Jewelry? "Beads" Discovered in African Cave". National Geographic News. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/04/0415_040415_oldestjewelry.html. Retrieved 2008-03-03.
- ^ "Human Evolution," Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2007 Contributed by Richard B. Potts, B.A., Ph.D.
- ^ a b Robert G. Bednarik. "Beads and the origins of symbolism". http://www.semioticon.com/frontline/bednarik.htm. Retrieved 2008-04-05.
- ^ Richard G. Klein, "The Dawn of Human Culture" ISBN 0471252522
- ^ a b c d e Vincent W. Fallio (2006). New Developments in Consciousness Research. New York, United States: Nova Publishers. ISBN 1600212476. http://books.google.com/?id=-kJHI9MdxNwC&pg=PA108&dq=Paleolithic+religions. Pages 98 to 109
- ^ a b c Jean Clottes. "Shamanism in Prehistory". Bradshaw foundation. http://www.bradshawfoundation.com/clottes/page7.php. Retrieved 2008-03-11.
- ^ "Paleolithic Art," Microsoft Encarta Online Encyclopedia 2007 http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761578676/Paleolithic_Art.html Microsoft Encarta
- ^ a b McDermott, LeRoy. "Self-Representation in Upper Paleolithic Female Figurines". Current Anthropology, Vol. 37, No. 2, April., 1996. pp. 227–275.
- ^ R. Dale Guthrie, The Nature of Paleolithic Art. University Of Chicago Press, 2006. ISBN 978-0-226-31126-5. Preface.
- ^ Merlin Stone. (1978). When God Was a Woman. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. p. 265. ISBN 015696158X. http://books.google.com/?id=l44AAAAACAAJ&dq=When+God+Was+a+Woman.
- ^ Marija Gimbutas 1991. The Civilization of the Goddess
- ^ Karl Bücher. Trabajo y ritmo. Biblioteca Científico-Filosófica, Madrid.
- ^ Charles Darwin. The origin of man. Edimat books, S. A. ISBN 84-8403-034-2.
- ^ Nelson, D.E., Radiocarbon dating of bone and charcoal from Divje babe I cave, cited by Morley, p. 47
- ^ a b Bahn, Paul (1996) "The atlas of world archeology" Copyright 2000 The Brown Reference Group PLC
- ^ "About OriginsNet by James Harrod". Originsnet.org. http://www.originsnet.org/aboutornet1.html. Retrieved 2010-01-31.
- ^ "Appendices for chimpanzee spirituality by James Harrod" (PDF). http://www.originsnet.org/chimpspiritdatabase.pdf. Retrieved 2010-01-31.
- ^ "Oldowan Art, Religion, Symbols, Mind by James Harrod". Originsnet.org. http://www.originsnet.org/mindold.html. Retrieved 2010-01-31.
- ^ phillip lieberman (1991). Uniquely Human. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0674921836. http://books.google.com/?id=3tS2MULo5rYC&pg=PA162&dq=Uniquely+Human+cognitive-linguistic+base.
- ^ Wunn, Ina (2000). "Beginning of Religion", Numen, 47(4), pp. 434–435
- ^ Robbins, Lawrence H.; AlecC. Campbell, George A. Brook, Michael L. Murphy (June 2007). "World's Oldest Ritual Site? The "Python Cave" at Tsodilo Hills World Heritage Site, Botswana". NYAME AKUMA, the Bulletin of the Society of Africanist Archaeologists (67). http://cohesion.rice.edu/CentersAndInst/SAFA/emplibrary/Robbins.pdf. Retrieved 1 December 2010.
- ^ a b c d e f Karl J. Narr. "Prehistoric religion". Britannica online encyclopedia 2008. http://concise.britannica.com/oscar/print?articleId=109434&fullArticle=true&tocId=52333. Retrieved 2008-03-28.
- ^ Steven Mithen (1996). The Prehistory of the Mind: The Cognitive Origins of Art, Religion and Science. Thames & Hudson. ISBN 0-500-05081-3.
- ^ Lerro, Bruce (2000). From earth spirits to sky gods Socioecological Origins of Monotheism. Lanham MD: Lexington Press. p. 327. ISBN 073910098X. http://books.google.com/?id=qs5RqLdx1HgC&pg=PA17&vq=Paleolithic. pages 17–20
- ^ Christopher L. C. E. Witcombe, "Women in the Stone Age," in the essay "The Venus of Willendorf" . Retrieved March 13, 2008.
- ^ "Upper Paleolithic Art, Religion, Symbols, Mind By James Harrod". Originsnet.org. http://www.originsnet.org/mindup.html. Retrieved 2010-01-31.
- ^ a b William Cocke. "First Wine? Archaeologist Traces Drink to Stone Age". National Geographic News. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/07/0721_040721_ancientwine.html. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
- ^ Gowlett JAJ (2003). "What actually was the Stone Age Diet?" (PDF). J Nutr Environ Med 13 (3): 143–7. doi:10.1080/13590840310001619338. http://pcwww.liv.ac.uk/~gowlett/GowlettCJNE_13_03_02.pdf.
- ^ Weiss E, Wetterstrom W, Nadel D, Bar-Yosef O (2004 June 29). "The broad spectrum revisited: Evidence from plant remains". Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 101 (26): 9551–5. doi:10.1073/pnas.0402362101. PMC 470712. PMID 15210984. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=470712.
- ^ Richards, MP (2002 December). "A brief review of the archaeological evidence for Palaeolithic and Neolithic subsistence". Eur J Clin Nutr 56 (12): 1270–1278. doi:10.1038/sj.ejcn.1601646. PMID 12494313.
- ^ Cordain L. Implications of Plio-Pleistocene Hominin Diets for Modern Humans. In: Early Hominin Diets: The Known, the Unknown, and the Unknowable. Ungar, P (Ed.), Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2006, pp 363–83.
- ^ Nature's Magic: Synergy in Evolution and the Fate of Humankind By Peter Corning
- ^ Laden G, Wrangham R (2005, October). "The rise of the hominids as an adaptive shift in fallback foods: plant underground storage organs (USOs) and australopith origins" (PDF). J. Hum. Evol. 49 (4): 482–98. doi:10.1016/j.jhevol.2005.05.007. PMID 16085279. http://www.tc.umn.edu/~laden002/Laden_Wrangham_Roots.pdf.
- ^ Wrangham RW, Jones JH, Laden G, Pilbeam D, Conklin-Brittain N (1999, December). "The Raw and the Stolen. Cooking and the Ecology of Human Origins". Curr Anthropol 40 (5): 567–94. doi:10.1086/300083. PMID 10539941. http://www.scribd.com/doc/255939/The-raw-and-the-stolen-Cooking-and-the-ecology-of-human-origins.
- ^ Yeakel JD, Bennett NC, Koch PL, Dominy NJ (2007, July). "The isotopic ecology of African mole rats informs hypotheses on the evolution of human diet" (PDF). Proc Biol Sci. 274 (1619): 1723–30. doi:10.1098/rspb.2007.0330. PMC 2493578. PMID 17472915. http://people.ucsc.edu/~njdominy/publications/pdf/Proc_R_Soc_B.pdf.
- ^ Hernandez-Aguilar RA, Moore J, Pickering TR (2007, December). "Savanna chimpanzees use tools to harvest the underground storage organs of plants" (PDF). Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 105 (49): 19210–13. doi:10.1073/pnas.0707929104. PMC 2148269. PMID 18032604. http://www.anthro.ucsd.edu/~jmoore/publications/HernandezEtAlPNAS07.pdf.
- ^ J. A. J. Gowlet (September 2003). "What actually was the stone age diet?" (PDF). Journal of environmental medicine 13 (3): 143–147. doi:10.1080/13590840310001619338. http://pcwww.liv.ac.uk/~gowlett/GowlettCJNE_13_03_02.pdf. Retrieved 2008-05-04.)
- ^ Diamond, Jared. The third chimpanzee: the evolution and future of the human animal.
- ^ a b Sharman Apt Russell (2006). Hunger an unnatural history. Basic books. ISBN 0465071651. http://books.google.com/?id=8CjOdT4LqYC&pg=PA2&dq=paleolithic+history+malnutrition. Pages 2
- ^ Cordain L, Eaton SB, Sebastian A, Mann N, Lindeberg S, Watkins BA, O'Keefe JH, Brand-Miller J (2005). "Origins and evolution of the Western diet: health implications for the 21st century". Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 81 (2): 341–54. PMID 15699220.
- ^ Thorburn AW, Brand JC, Truswell AS. (1 January 1987). "Slowly digested and absorbed carbohydrate in traditional bushfoods: a protective factor against diabetes?". Am J Clin Nutr 45 (1): 98–106. PMID 3541565. http://www.ajcn.org/cgi/content/abstract/45/1/98.
- ^ Hillard Kaplan, Kim Hill, Jane Lancaster, and A. Magdalena Hurtado (2000). "A Theory of Human Life History Evolution: Diet, Intelligence and Longevity". Evolutionary Anthropology 9 (4): 156–185. doi:10.1002/1520-6505(2000)9:4<156::AID-EVAN5>3.0.CO;2-7. http://www.unm.edu/~hkaplan/KaplanHillLancasterHurtado_2000_LHEvolution.pdf. Retrieved 12 September 2010
- ^ Caspari, Rachel & Lee, Sang-Hee (July 27, 2004). "Older age becomes common late in human evolution". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 101 (20): 10895–10900. doi:10.1073/pnas.0402857101. PMC 503716. PMID 15252198. http://www.pnas.org/content/101/30/10895.long. Retrieved 12 September 2010
- ^ Efraim Lev, Mordechai E. Kislev, Ofer Bar-Yosef (March 2005). "Mousterian vegetal food in Kebara Cave, Mt. Carmel". Journal of Archaeological Science 32 (3): 475–484. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2004.11.006.
- ^ Piperno DR, Weiss E, Holst I, Nadel D. (2004 August 5). "Processing of wild cereal grains in the Upper Palaeolithic revealed by starch grain analysis" (PDF). Nature 430 (7000): 670–3. doi:10.1038/nature02734. PMID 15295598. http://anthropology.si.edu/archaeobio/Ohalo%20II%20Nature.pdf.
- ^ Lindeberg, Staffan (June 2005). "Palaeolithic diet ("stone age" diet)". Scandinavian Journal of Food & Nutrition 49 (2): 75–77. doi:10.1080/11026480510032043. http://journals.sfu.ca/coaction/index.php/fnr/article/viewFile/1526/1394.
- ^ Academic American Encyclopedia By Grolier Incorporated (1994). Academic American Encyclopedia By Grolier Incorporated. University of Michigan: Grolier Academic Reference.; p 61
- ^ John Noble Wilford (2007-10-18). "Key Human Traits Tied to Shellfish Remains". New York times. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/18/science/18beach.html?_r=1&ref=science&oref=slogin. Retrieved 2008-03-11.
- ^ African Bone Tools Dispute Key Idea About Human Evolution National Geographic News article.
- ^ Tim D. White (2006-09-15). Once were Cannibals. ISBN 9780226742694. http://books.google.com/?id=-TVHr_XtDJcC&pg=PA338&lpg=PA338&dq=paleolithic+cannibalism. Retrieved 2008-02-14.
- ^ James Owen. "Neandertals Turned to Cannibalism, Bone Cave Suggests". National Geographic News. http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/12/061205-cannibals.html. Retrieved 2008-02-03.
- ^ Pathou-Mathis M (2000). "Neanderthal subsistence behaviours in Europe". International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 10 (5): 379–395. doi:10.1002/1099-1212(200009/10)10:5<379::AID-OA558>3.0.CO;2-4.
Bibliography
- Bahn, Paul (1996) "The atlas of world archeology" Copyright 2000 The Brown Reference Group PLC
Further reading
- Introduction to the human past
- Wunn, Ina (2000). "Beginning of Religion", Numen, 47(4).
- Christopher Boehm (1999) "Hierarchy in the Forest: The Evolution of Egalitarian Behavior" page 198 Harvard university press
- Leften Stavros Stavrianos (1991). A Global History from Prehistory to the Present. New Jersey, USA: Prentice Hall. ISBN 0-13-357005-3
- Wade, Nicolas (July 15, 2003). "Early Voices: The Leap to Language". The New York Times: Science. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9503E0DF173CF936A25754C0A9659C8B63.
- White, Randall (December 2006). "The women of Brassempouy: A century of research and interpretation". Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 13 (4): 251–304. http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/anthro/programs/csho/Content/Facultycvandinfo/White/Women%20of%20Brassempouy%20Final%20red.pdf.
External links
- Scotese, Christopher (2001–2010). "Last Ice Age". Paleomap Project. http://www.scotese.com/lastice.htm. Map of Earth during the late Upper Paleolithic.
- White, Nancy (2003). "Middle and Upper Paleolithic Hunter-Gatherers The Emergence of Modern Humans, The Mesolithic". MATRIX, Indiana University Bloomington. http://www.indiana.edu/~arch/saa/matrix/ia/ia03_mod_11.html.
Three-age system Stone Age Stone tool • Flint tool • Paleolithic • Mesolithic • Neolithic • Lower Paleolithic • Middle Paleolithic • Upper Paleolithic • Japanese Paleolithic • Paleolithic Europe • Middle Stone Age • Later Stone Age • Epipaleolithic • Pre-Pottery Neolithic • Pre-Pottery Neolithic A • Pre-Pottery Neolithic B • Neolithic Revolution • List of Neolithic cultures of China • Nordic Stone Age • Neolithic British Isles • South Asian Stone Age • Stone-Age Poland • African archaeology • Recent African origin of modern humansBronze Age Chalcolithic • Bronze • Atlantic Bronze Age • Nordic Bronze Age • Bronze Age in Romania • Bronze Age collapseIron Age Categories:- Paleolithic
- Pleistocene
- Greek loanwords
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.