Paleolithic Population Growth Pulses Evidenced by Small Animal Exploitation
- 8 January 1999
- journal article
- other
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 283 (5399) , 190-194
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.283.5399.190
Abstract
Variations in small game hunting along the northern and eastern rims of the Mediterranean Sea and results from predator-prey simulation modeling indicate that human population densities increased abruptly during the late Middle Paleolithic and again during the Upper and Epi-Paleolithic periods. The demographic pulses are evidenced by increasing reliance on agile, fast-reproducing partridges, hares, and rabbits at the expense of slow-reproducing but easily caught tortoises and marine shellfish and, concurrently, climate-independent size diminution in tortoises and shellfish. The results indicate that human populations of the early Middle Paleolithic were exceptionally small and highly dispersed.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reports The Earliest Aurignacian of Riparo Mochi (Liguria, Italy)Current Anthropology, 1998
- Are Late Pleistocene Environmental Factors, Faunal Changes and Cultural Transformations causally connected ? The case of the Southern Levant.Paléorient, 1997
- The Dating of the Upper Paleolithic Layers in Kebara Cave, Mt CarmelJournal of Archaeological Science, 1996
- Human Molecular PhylogeneticsAnnual Review of Anthropology, 1993
- Overlapping Species "Choice" by Italian Upper Pleistocene PredatorsCurrent Anthropology, 1992
- The origins of sedentism and farming communities in the LevantJournal of World Prehistory, 1989
- Re-analysis of faunal assemblages from the Haua Fteah and other late quaternary archaeological sites in Cyrenaican LibyaJournal of Archaeological Science, 1986
- BuchbesprechungZeitschrift für Pflanzenphysiologie, 1976
- Oxygen Isotope and Palaeomagnetic Stratigraphy of Equatorial Pacific Core V28-238: Oxygen Isotope Temperatures and Ice Volumes on a 105 Year and 106 Year ScaleQuaternary Research, 1973
- Rethinking ArchaeologyEthnohistory, 1968