The Dispersals of Established Food‐Producing Populations
Top Cited Papers
- 1 October 2009
- journal article
- review article
- Published by University of Chicago Press in Current Anthropology
- Vol. 50 (5) , 621-626
- https://doi.org/10.1086/605112
Abstract
This paper offers a perspective on the spread of early food-producing populations, with their crops, animals, other cultural attributes, languages, and genes. A multidisciplinary approach is taken in which perspectives from different disciplines (especially archaeology and comparative linguistics in this instance) are used for what L. Fogelin recently called "inference to the best explanation". It is suggested that once food production was firmly established in noncircumscribed circumstances in many parts of the world, with transportable domesticated crops and animals, human population dispersals would have occurred. These dispersals reorganized a great deal of human diversity in language and biology, especially in the Neolithic or Formative phases of regional prehistory.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Domestication and early agriculture in the Mediterranean Basin: Origins, diffusion, and impactProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
- Worldwide Human Relationships Inferred from Genome-Wide Patterns of VariationScience, 2008
- The Genetic Structure of Pacific IslandersPLoS Genetics, 2008
- Early Holocene cultivation before domestication in northern SyriaVegetation History and Archaeobotany, 2007
- Presumed domestication? Evidence for wild rice cultivation and domestication in the fifth millennium BC of the Lower Yangtze regionAntiquity, 2007
- Contrasting Patterns in Crop Domestication and Domestication Rates: Recent Archaeobotanical Insights from the Old WorldAnnals of Botany, 2007
- Reassessing the Emergence of Village Life in the Near EastJournal of Archaeological Research, 2005
- Phylogenyvsreticulation in prehistoryPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1996
- The Aftermath of the Levantine Neolithic Revolution in the Light of Ecological and Ethnographic EvidencePaléorient, 1988