A decade of zooarchaeological fieldwork (1992-2001) went into
Mary Stiner's pathbreaking analysis of changes in human ecology
from the early Mousterian period through the end of Paleolithic
cultures in the Levant. Stiner employs a comparative approach to
understanding early human behavioral and environmental change,
based on a detailed study of fourteen bone assemblages from Hayonim
Cave and Meged Rockshelter in Israel's Galilee. Principally
anthropological in outlook, Stiner's analysis also integrates
chemistry, foraging and population ecology, vertebrate
paleontology, and biogeography. Her research focuses first on the
formation history, or taphonomy, of bone accumulations, and second
on questions about the economic behaviors of early humans,
including the early development of human adaptations for hunting
large prey and the relative "footprint" of humans in Pleistocene
ecosystems of the Levant.
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