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This book focuses on the archaeology of the hunter-gatherer
societies that inhabited Europe in the millennia between the last
Ice Age and the spread of agriculture, between ten thousand and
five thousand years ago. Traditionally viewed as a period of
cultural stagnation, new data now demonstrate that this was a
period of radical change and innovation. This was the period that
witnessed the colonisation of extensive new territory at high
latitudes and high altitudes following postglacial climatic change,
the development of seafaring, and the synthesis of the
technological, economic, and social capabilities that underpinned
the later development of agricultural and urban societies.
Providing a pan-European overview, Mesolithic Europe includes
regional syntheses written by experts in each region as well as a
diversity of theoretical perspectives.
It has been said that for 99 per cent of their cultural history
human societies have made their living through the collection of
wild resources. It is therefore perhaps not surprising that the
study of hunters and gatherers has become an increasingly popular
and central topic of research. Within archaeology it has created an
international focus for people working in many different areas of
the world. At the same time it has provided a meeting ground for a
range of disciplines, all concerned in one way or another with
aspects of human behaviour. However, analysis of the prehistoric
record has inevitably lagged behind the development of fresh
theoretical perspectives. Hunter-gatherer economy in prehistory
seeks to bridge this gap by combining the discussion of recent
developments in ecological and social theory with the analysis of
prehistoric data from many of the classic areas of palaeolithic
studies in Europe.
This book focuses on the archaeology of the hunter-gatherer
societies that inhabited Europe in the millennia between the last
Ice Age and the spread of agriculture, between ten thousand and
five thousand years ago. Traditionally viewed as a period of
cultural stagnation, new data now demonstrate that this was a
period of radical change and innovation. This was the period that
witnessed the colonisation of extensive new territory at high
latitudes and high altitudes following postglacial climatic change,
the development of seafaring, and the synthesis of the
technological, economic, and social capabilities that underpinned
the later development of agricultural and urban societies.
Providing a pan-European overview, Mesolithic Europe includes
regional syntheses written by experts in each region as well as a
diversity of theoretical perspectives.
The Archaeology of Prehistoric Coastlines offers a conspectus of
recent work on coastal archaeology examining the various ways in
which hunter-gatherers and farmers across the world exploited
marine resources such as fish, shellfish and waterfowl in
prehistory. Changes in sea levels and the balance of marine
ecosystems have altered coastal environments significantly over the
last ten thousand years and the contributors assess the impact of
these changes on the nature of human settlement and subsistence. An
overview of coastal archaeology as a developing discipline is
followed by ten case studies from a wide variety of places
including Scandinavia, Japan, Tasmania and New Zealand, Peru, South
Africa and the United States.
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