1997
DOI: 10.1086/204646
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Hadza Women's Time Allocation, Offspring Provisioning, and the Evolution of Long Postmenopausal Life Spans

Abstract: Extended provisioning of offspring and long postmenopausal life spans are characteristic of all modem humans but no other pri mates. These traits may have evolved in tandem. Analysis of rela tionships between women's time allocation and children's nutri tional welfare among the Hadza of northern Tanzania yields results consistent with this proposition. Implications for current thought about the evolution of hominid food sharing, life his tory, and social organization are discussed. k r i s t e n h a w k e s is… Show more

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Cited by 584 publications
(494 citation statements)
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“…Among the Hadza, the fact that the wives and children of better hunters display greater seasonal weight gains (Hawkes 1993b) may be associated with variation in women's foraging returns rather than those of their husbands (Hawkes et al 1997). However, Marlowe (2003) has recently shown that Hadza women with very young children (<3 years old), and especially those with infants (<1 year old), have reduced foraging productivity, both in average daily harvest and in hourly return rates while foraging.…”
Section: Evaluating Alternative Explanations Direct Provisioningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among the Hadza, the fact that the wives and children of better hunters display greater seasonal weight gains (Hawkes 1993b) may be associated with variation in women's foraging returns rather than those of their husbands (Hawkes et al 1997). However, Marlowe (2003) has recently shown that Hadza women with very young children (<3 years old), and especially those with infants (<1 year old), have reduced foraging productivity, both in average daily harvest and in hourly return rates while foraging.…”
Section: Evaluating Alternative Explanations Direct Provisioningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, McBurney et al (2002) notes that in Pashos' study the paternal bias in caregiving is focused toward grandsons, which may simply be an extension of the patriarchal norms, and that the patriarchal system is likely overriding the matrilateral bias. Evidence also shows that maternal grandmothers invest more in their daughters' offspring than in their sons' offspring (Blurton Jones et al 2005;Hawkes et al 1997). Hawkes et al (2000) suggest that while grandmaternal assistance directed toward a son's offspring could aid their own fitness, assistance directed toward daughters' offspring yields clearer benefits owing to genetic certainty.…”
Section: Hypothesesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The importance of grandmaternal investment has been used to explain long postmenopausal lifespans, as well as impacts on maternal fertility and infant survivorship (Hawkes 1997). In particular, maternal grandmothers offer the most support, although patrilocal residence patterns would minimize the assistance that maternal grandmothers could offer.…”
Section: Do Maternal Grandmothers Invest More Than Paternal Grandmothmentioning
confidence: 99%
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