Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-25wd4 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T22:59:28.569Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Storage, sedentism and the Eurasian Palaeolithic record

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Olga Soffer*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Illinois, 109 Davenport Hall, 607 South Mathews, Urbana IL 61801, USA

Abstract

What is the connection between storage and sedentism in hunter-gatherer societies? What is the pattern of ethnography? What other patterns show themselves in Late Palaeolithic Eurasia, in those late hunter-gatherer adaptations that are precursors of Holocene food production? And is material storage a necessary and a sufficient condition for hunter-gatherer sedentism?

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Absolon, K. & B. Klíma, . 1978. Předmostí, ein Mammut-jägerplatz in Mähren, Fontes Archaeologiae Moravicae VIII. Brno: AU CSAV.Google Scholar
Alkens, C.M. 1981. The last 10,000 years in Japan and Eastern North America: parallels and the adoption of agriculture, in Koyama, & Thomas, (ed.): 26174.Google Scholar
Aikens, C.M. & Higuchi., T. 1982. Prehistory of Japan. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Akazawa, T. 1981. Maritime adaptations in prehistoric hunter gatherers and their transition to agriculture in Japan, in Koyama, & Thomas, (ed.): 21360.Google Scholar
Akazawa, T. 1986. Hunter-gatherer adaptations and the transition to food production in Japan, in Zvelebil, (ed.): 15166.Google Scholar
Ames, K.M. 1985. Hierarchies, stress, and logistical strategies among hunter-gatherers in northwestern North America, in Price, & Brown, (ed.): 15580.Google Scholar
Amsden, C.W. 1977. A quantitative analysis of Nunamiut Eskimo settlement dynamics: 1889-1969. Ph.D Dissertation, University of New Mexico. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International.Google Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O. 1987. Late Pleistocene adaptations in the Levant, in Soffer, (1987a): 21936.Google Scholar
Bar-Yosef, O. & Belfer-Cohen., A. In press. The origins of sedentism and farming communities in the Levant, Journal of World Archaeology.Google Scholar
Bender, B. 1978. Gatherer-hunter to farmer: a social perspective, World Archaeology 10: 20423.Google Scholar
Bender, B. 1981. Hunter-gatherer intensification, in Sheridan, & Bailey, (ed.): 14958.Google Scholar
Binford, L.R. 1978. Nunamiut efhnoarchaeology. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Binford, L.R. 1980. Willow smoke and dog’s tails: hunter-gatherer settlement systems and archaeological site formation, American Antiquity 45: 420.Google Scholar
Binford, L.R. 1982. The archaeology of place, Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 1: 531.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Binford, L.R. 1983. In pursuit of the past; decoding the archaeological record. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Bogoras, W. 1904-9. The Chukchee. New York: American Museum of Natural History. Memoir no. 11.Google Scholar
Bordes, F. 1968. Emplacement de tentes du Perigordien supérieur évolué à Corbiac, près Bergerac (Dordogne), Quartar 21: 25162.Google Scholar
Byrd, A. 1989. The Natufian: settlement variability and economic adaptations in the Levant at the end of the Pleistocene, Journal of World Prehistory 3: 15997.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, M.N. 1977. The food crisis in prehistory. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Cohen, M.N. 1981. Pacific Coast foragers: affluent or overcrowded?, in Koyama, & Thomas, (ed.): 57595.Google Scholar
Cohen, M.N. 1985. Prehistoric hunter-gatherers: the meaning of social complexity, in Price, & Brown, (ed.): 99119.Google Scholar
Conkey, M. 1980. The identification of prehistoric hunter-gatherer aggregation sites: the case of Altamira, Current Anthropology 21: 60930.Google Scholar
Edwards, P.C. 1989. Revising the Broad Spectrum Revolution: and its role in the origins of Southwest Asian food production, Antiquity 63: 22546.Google Scholar
Enloe, J.G. 1989. Faunal evidence for subsistence change in the Upper Paleolithic of Western Europe. Paper presented in the symposium Cultural change and variability in the Upper Paleolithic. 54th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Atlanta, April.Google Scholar
Flannery, K.V. 1972. The origin of the village as a settlement type in Mesoamerica and the Near East: a comparative study, in P.J., Ucko, Tringham, R. & Dimbleby, G.W. (ed.), Man, settlement, and urbanism: 2353. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Gamble, C. 1978 Resource exploitation and the spatial patterning of hunter-gatherers: a case study, in D., Green, C., Haselgrove & M., Spriggs (ed.), Social organization and settlement: 15385. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports. International series S47.Google Scholar
Gamble, C. 1986. The Palaeolithic settlement of Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gamble, C. & O., Soffer (ed.). 1989. The world at 18,000 B.P. 2: Low latitudes. London: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Gordon, B. 1986. Of hunters and reindeer herds in French Magdalenian prehistory. Paper presented in section C of The Pleistocene perspective, vol. 2, The World Archaeological Congress, Southampton. London: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Gordon, B. 1988. Of men and reindeer herds in French Magdalenian prehistory. Oxford: British Archaeol-gical Reports. International series S390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hahn, J. 1987. Aurignacianand Gravettian settlement patterns in Central Europe, in Soffer, (1987a): 25162.Google Scholar
Harris, D.R. 1978. Settling down: an evolutionary model for the transformation of mobile bands into sedentary communities, in J., Friedman & M.J., Rowlands (ed.), The evolution of social systems: 40118. Pittsburgh (PA): University of Pittsburgh Press.Google Scholar
Henry, D.O. 1985. Preagricultural sedentism: the Natufian Example, in Price, & Brown, (ed.): 36584. Orlando: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Ingold, T. 1987. The appropriation of nature. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press.Google Scholar
Ingold, T., D., Riches & J., Woodburn (ed.). 1988a. Hunters and gatherers 1: History, evolution and social change. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Ingold, T., Riches, D. & Woodburn, J. 1988b. Hunters and gatherers 2: Property, power and ideology. Oxford: Berg. Google Scholar
Jochim, M.A. 1976. Hunter-gatherer subsistence and settlement: a predictive model. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Jochim, M.A. 1981. Strategies for survival. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Jochim, M.A. 1987. Late Pleistocene refugia in Europe, in Soffer (1987a): 31732.Google Scholar
Johnson, G. 1982. Organizational structure and scalar stress, in Renfrew, C., Rowlands, M. & Seagraves, B. (ed.), Theory and explanation in archaeology: 389421. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Keeley, L.H. 1988. Hunter-gatherer economic complexity and population pressure: a cross-cultural analysis, Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 7: 373411.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kelly, R.L. 1985. Hunter-gatherer mobility strategies, Journal of Anthropological Research 39: 277306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kelly, R.L. 1988. Shifting perspectives: a new look at hunter-gatherer sedentism. Paper presented at the 53rd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. Phoenix (AR).Google Scholar
Klíma, B. 1963. Dolní Věstonice. Monumenta Archaologica XI. Praha: Academia.Google Scholar
Klíma, B. 1976. Die paläolithische Station Pavlov II, Acta Scientiarum Naturalium Academiae Scientiarum Bohemoslovacae Brno 10/4.Google Scholar
Klíma, B. 1983. Dolní Věstonice. Praha: Academia.Google Scholar
Kotani, Y. 1981. Evidence of plant cultivation in Jomon Japan: some implications, in Koyama, & Thomas, (ed.): 20112.Google Scholar
Koyama, S. & Thomas, D.H. (ed.). 1981. Affluent foragers. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology. Senri Ethnological Studies no. 9.Google Scholar
Koslowski, J. 1986. The Gravettian in Central and Eastern Europe, in Wendorf, F. & Close, A. (ed.), Advances in world Archaeology 5: 131200. Orlando: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Koslowski, J. In press. Northern Central Europe at the Last Pleniglacial, in Soffer, & Gamble, (in press).Google Scholar
Kozlowski, J.K., Van Vuet, B., Sachse-Kozlowska, E., Kubiak, H. & Zakrzewska, G.. 1974. Upper Paleolithic site with dwellings of mammoth bones — Krakow-Spadzista Street B, Folia Quaternaria 44.Google Scholar
Labuza, T.P. 1982. Shelf-life dating of foods. Westport (CT): Food & Nutrition Press.Google Scholar
Leacock, E. & Lee, R.B. (ed.). 1982. Politics and history in band societies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lee, R.B. & De Vore, I. (ed.). 1968. Man the hunter. Chicago: Aldine.Google Scholar
Lourandos, H. 1985. Intensification in Australian prehistory, in Price, & Brown, (ed.): 385423.Google Scholar
Lowie, R.H. 1954. Indians of the plains. New York: McGraw-Hill.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mellars, P. 1985. The ecological basis of social complexity in the Upper Paleolithic of Southwestern France, in Price, & Brown, (ed.): 27198.Google Scholar
O’Shea, J. 1981. Coping with scarcity: exchange and social storage, in Sheridan, & Bailey, (ed.): 16786.Google Scholar
Oberg, K. 1973. The social economy of the Tlingit Indians. Seattle: University of Washington Press.Google Scholar
Oikawa, A. & Koyama., S. 1981. A Jomon shellmound database, in Koyama, & Thomas, (ed.): 187200.Google Scholar
Oliva, M. 1988. Discovery of a Gravettian mammoth bone hut at Milovice (Moravia, Czechoslovakia), Journal of Human Evolution 17: 78790.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Piddocke, S. 1969. The potlatch system of the southern Kwakiutl: a new perspective, in A., Vayda (ed.), Environment and cultural behavior: 13056. Garden City (NY): Natural History Press.Google Scholar
Pidoplichko, I.G. 1976. Mezhiricheskiie zhilischa iz kostei mamonta. Kiev: Naukova Dumka.Google Scholar
Price, T.D. & Brown, J.A. (ed.). 1>985. Prehistoric hunter-gatherers. Orlando: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Rafferty, J.E. 1985. The archaeological record on sedentariness: recognition, development, and implications, in Schiffer, M.B. (ed.), Advances in archaeological method and theory 8: 11356. Orlando: Academic Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rappaport, R. 1967. Pigs for the ancestors. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Rice, G. 1975. A systematic explanation of a change in Mogollon settlement patterns. Ph.D dissertation, University of Washington. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International.Google Scholar
Rigaud, J.-P. & Simek., J. 1989. The Last Pleniglacial in the south of France (24,000 to 14,000 years ago),.in Soffer, & Gamble, (in press).Google Scholar
Root, D. 1984. Material dimensions of social inequality in non-stratified societies — an archaeological perspective. Ph.D dissertation, University of Massachussets. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms International.Google Scholar
Rust, A. 1937. Das eiszeitliche Rentierlager Meiendorf. Neumunster: Karl Wachholtz.Google Scholar
Rust, A. 1958. Die jungpalöolithischen Zentanlagen von Ahrensburg. Neumunster: Karl Wachholtz.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M. 1968. Notes on the original affluent society, in Lee, & De Vore, (ed.): 859.Google Scholar
Schrire, C. (ed.). 1984. Past and present in hunter-gatherer studies. Orlando: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Schoeninger, M. 1981. The agricultural revolution: its effect on human diet in prehistoric Iran and Israel, Paleorient 7: 7392 Google Scholar
Sergin, V. Ya. 1983 O naznachenii bol’shikh iam na paleoliticheskikh poselen’iakh, Kratkiie Soobscheniia Instituta Arkheologii 173: 2331.Google Scholar
Sheridan, A. & Bailey, G. (ed.). 1981. Economic archaeology. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports. International series S96.Google Scholar
Smith, P. 1972. Diet and attrition in the Natufians, American Journal of Physical Anthropology 37: 2338.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Smith, P., Bar-Yosef, O. & Sillen., A. 1984. Archaeological and skeletal evidence for dietary change in Late Pleistocene/Early Holocene in the Levant, in Cohen, M.N. & Armelagos, G.J. (ed.), Paleopathology and the origins of agriculture: 10136. Orlando: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Soffer, O. 1985. The Upper Paleolithic of the Central Russian Plain. Orlando: Academic Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soffer, O. 1986. Radiocarbon accelerator dates for Upper Paleolithic sites in European U.S.S.R.,in Gowlett, J.A.J. & Hedges, R.E.M. (ed.), Archaeological results from accelerator dating: 109115. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology. Monograph 11.Google Scholar
Soffer, O. 1987a. The Pleistocene Old World. New York: Plenum Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soffer, O. 1987b. Upper Paleolithic refugia, connubia, and the archaeological record from Eastern Europe, in Soffer, (1987a): 33348.Google Scholar
Soffer, O. 1989. The Russian Plain at the Last Glacial Maximum, in Soffer, & Gamble, (in press).Google Scholar
Soffer, O. & C., Gamble (ed.). In press. The world at 18,000 b.p. 1: High latitudes. London: Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Speth, J.D. & K.A., Spielmann. 1983. Energy source, protein metabolism, and hunter-gatherer subsistence strategies, Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 2: 131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spiess, A.E. 1979. Reindeer and caribou hunters: an archaeological study. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Sturdy, D.A. 1975. Some reindeer economies in prehistoric Europe, in E., Higgs (ed.), Palaeoeconomy: 5595. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Svoboda, J. In press Czechoslovakia at the Last Pleniglacial, in Soffer, & Gamble, (in press).Google Scholar
Telegin, D. Ya. 1982. Mezolitichni Pamyatki Ukraini IX-VI Tisyacholittya do Nashei Epokhi. Kiev: Naukova Dumka.Google Scholar
Testart, A. 1982. The significance of food storage among hunter-gatherers: residence patterns, population densities, and social inequalities, Current Anthropology 23: 52337.Google Scholar
Testart, A. 1988. Some major problems in the social anthropology of hunter-gatherers, Current Anthropology 29: 132.Google Scholar
Torrence, R. 1983 Time budgeting and hunting-gathering technology, in Bailey, G. (ed.), Hunter-gatherer economy in prehistory: a European perspective: 1122. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Vencl, S. 1986. The röle of hunting-gathering populations in the transition to farming: a Central-European perspective, in Zvelebil (ed.): 4352.Google Scholar
Watanabe, H. 1972. The Ainu ecosystem. Seattle: University of Washington Press.Google Scholar
Weniger, G.-C. 1987. Magdalenian settlement patterns and subsistence in Central Europe: the southwestern and central German cases, in Soffer, (1987a): 20116.Google Scholar
Weniger, G.-C. 1989. Germany at the Last Glacial Maximum, in Soffer, O.& Gamble, C. (in press).Google Scholar
Wheat, J.B. 1972. The Olsen-Chubbuck site. Washington (DC): Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology 26.Google Scholar
White, R. 1985 Upper Paleolithic land use in the Perigord. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports. International series S253.Google Scholar
White, R. 1987. Glimpses of long term shifts in Late Paleolithic land use in the Perigord, in Soffer, (1987a): 26378.Google Scholar
Wiessner, P. 1982. Risk, reciprocity and social influences on !Kung San economics, in Leacock, & Lee, (ed.): 6184.Google Scholar
Wobst, H.M. 1978. The archaeo-ethnology of hunter-gatherers, or, the tyranny of the ethnographic record in archaeology, American Antiquity 43: 3039.Google Scholar
Woodburn, J. 1980. Hunters and gatherers today and reconstruction of the past, in E., Gellner (ed.), Soviet and Western Anthropology: 95118. New York: Columbia University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Woodburn, J. 1988. African hunter-gatherer social organization: is it best understood as a product of encapsulation?, in Ingold, , Riches, & Woodburn, (1988a): 3164.Google Scholar
Zvelebil, M. (ed.). 1986. Hunters in transition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar