1993
DOI: 10.1086/204209
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The Rise and Fall of Seasonal Mobility among Hunter-Gatherers: The Case of the Southern Levant [and Comments and Replies]

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Cited by 129 publications
(33 citation statements)
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“…Typically, seasonal activities conducted by human groups are inferred from the presence or absence in archaeological deposits of the remains of plants and animals responsive to seasonal shifts in the environment (Rocek and Bar Yosef, 1998;Lieberman, 1993;Tuross et al, 1994). Common seasonal indicators include the presence or absence of migratory taxa and temperature-sensitive micro-mammals, the proportion of neo-natal and infant ungulates in faunal assemblages, and distributions of archaeobotanical evidence such as pollen, seeds, and plant remains (Monks, 1981;Davis, 1983;Stiner, 1994;Adams and Bohrer, 1998;Pokines, 2000).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Typically, seasonal activities conducted by human groups are inferred from the presence or absence in archaeological deposits of the remains of plants and animals responsive to seasonal shifts in the environment (Rocek and Bar Yosef, 1998;Lieberman, 1993;Tuross et al, 1994). Common seasonal indicators include the presence or absence of migratory taxa and temperature-sensitive micro-mammals, the proportion of neo-natal and infant ungulates in faunal assemblages, and distributions of archaeobotanical evidence such as pollen, seeds, and plant remains (Monks, 1981;Davis, 1983;Stiner, 1994;Adams and Bohrer, 1998;Pokines, 2000).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Historically, some populations have been mobile for subsistence reasons. For example, many hunter-gatherers engage in seasonal mobility strategies to exploit game and other resources while avoiding resource depletion in any one area (Lieberman 1993). Similarly, some pastoralists migrate with their livestock in pursuit of fresh pastures.…”
Section: Objectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Various explanations of this pattern have been offered, some relying on the socio-economic organisation characteristic of Arnold's (1996) complex hunter-gatherers, while many do not (e.g., Perlès and Phillips 1991;Kaufman 1992;Lieberman 1993). Henry (1981) suggested that Natufian adaptation was significantly different from that of mobile hunter-gatherers' during preceding periods.…”
Section: The Natufian Examplementioning
confidence: 99%