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natural selection (differential fertility or morality) |
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what are some pre-darwinian theories? |
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Aristotle - "great chain of being" (hierarchical) |
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began to understand the world by observing natural processes |
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driven by inner "need" (i.e. a giraffe's neck gets longer because he keeps reaching for more leaves) |
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natural selection- survival of the fittest darwin and galapago's finches the origin of species |
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darwin's three postulates |
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variation exists variation is heritable there is a "struggle for existence" conclusion: biological change by natural selection |
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3 types of natural selection |
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directional, disruptive (diversive), stabilizing |
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long-term slection of the same trait maladaptive trait is removed better-adapted trait remains |
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favors more than one both extremes |
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favoring balance remain constant more mainstream |
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mosquito behavior and DDT |
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hit and rest (before DDT) hit and run I(after DDT) |
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how traits are inherited and where new variation comes from (genetics) |
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how traits are inherited from one generation to the next discrete inheritance: red and white make red and white kids |
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basic biological unit of heredity |
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different versions of the same gene |
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an abstract way to think about the frequency of alleles in a population |
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change in allele frequencies in a population over time |
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errors in DNA replication ultimate source of new variation random with respect to need |
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random change (with respect to alleles) most important in small populations |
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a small group colonizes in a new area and leaves |
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exchange of genetic material between populations in humans, culture shapes gene flow |
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if no differential fertility, mortality does genotype, allele frequency change between generations? |
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no, because its not due to just natural selection |
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our ability to change in response to what we encounter while growing and living |
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whats an example of both biological and cultural plasticity? |
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humans try to maintain a core body temp |
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general body size and proportions |
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Bergmann's rule (ecogeographical patterns) |
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at a lower temp, body size is larger. they have lower surface area/mass ratio |
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Allen's rule (ecogeographical pattern) |
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at higher temperatures, limbs are longer (within a species). so they have a higher surface/mass ratio |
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body weight- negatively correlated with mean annual temp. relative sitting height- negatively correlated with mean annual temperature |
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elevated metabolic rate (phenotypical adaptation to full range of changing environmental factors) |
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shivering, blood vessel constriction (phenotypical adaptation to change in one's environmental factor under lab conditions) |
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adaptation to high altitude |
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percent of oxygen is constant, but air is less compressed so we get less oxygen per breath. affects all organ systems. nose humidifies and warms air. |
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responses to high altitude |
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oxygen saturation in blood drops abruptly initial response: ventilation rate and depth. heart rate and blood pressure several weeks after: increase red blood cell production., lowers breathing and heart rates. |
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acute mountain sickness (velasquez's boyfriend got this) |
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andean: increase hemoglobin himmals: increased respiration acclimatization: body size, lung size acclimation: respiration, hemoglobin production cultural: diet |
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skin color: influenced by: Hemoglobin, Carotene, Melanin increased vitamin D intake when you have lighter skin milk to get calcium |
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a change of species over time, including speciation. |
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organisms that when they interbreed produce viable offspring. |
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change in allele frequency in a population over time |
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the development and history of groups, of species and higher groupings. |
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reproductive isolation plus weak directional selection |
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gene flow plus strong directional selection |
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the study of primates minus humans |
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grasping hands and feet nails instead of claws primates use hands more often rather than nose increased reliance on vision rather than smell complex brains one baby at a time like to live with other animals |
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Prosimians (lemus, Lorises, galagos, tarsiers) |
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africa, asia, madagascar diet: insects and frugivores nocternal locomotion: vertical clinging and leaping |
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Anthropoids (monkeys, apes, humans) |
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platyrrhines (new world monkeys) activity: arboreal quadrupeds prehensile tails and lat/broad nose with outward facing nostrils |
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Catarrhines (old world monkeys) |
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activity: terrestrial quadrupeds sharp noses, tail is not prehensile |
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social and intelligent lack a tail |
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Catarrhines (old world monkeys) |
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activity: terrestrial quadrupeds sharp noses, tail is not prehensile |
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social and intelligent lack a tail |
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hanging by arms not many are in zoos |
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massive body size quickly moving through branches you can distinguish sex by appearance |
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largest of living primates can weigh up to 400 lbs "knuckle walkers" |
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pygmy chimp: least studied of all apes female bonding use sex instead of fighting to alleviate tension upright walking |
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what we share with other primates: learning violence directed towards non-group members tool use hunting |
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a direct human ancestor after our line split off from the direct ancestors of the chimps |
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most likely changes in the environment global climate shifts to cooler, drier good for the growth of savanna grassland in sub-saharan africa |
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why did we split from the chimps? |
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the great rift valley deepens, separating eastern and western africa. forested habitat to west and drier grasslands to east landscape may have restricted gene flow, encouraged different adaptations |
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speciation by natural selection? |
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gradual change punctuated equalibrium |
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hominin trends: bipedalism |
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adaptation to open grassland habitat allows for long-distance sight of predators possible reduction in solar radiation absorbed later, important for making and using tools, carrying things |
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hominin trends: changes in anatomy due to bipedalism |
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foot: platform for weight hip: support greater weight; easier to balance knee: support greater weight, change in gait limbs: legs lengthen, forelimbs optimizations skull: foramen magnum; flat face vertebra: double bend; vertically |
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larger brains, larger skulls continued to shift to larger size required birth of immature, dependent young. skull is separated into "fontanelles" which flex and allow passage through birth canal |
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hominin trends: changes in teeth |
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large back molars, thicker tooth enamel for grinding tough plant food in savannah/forest smaller canines and premolars, less necessary. |
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increased manufacture increased use increased complexity |
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ethiopia Earliest known hominin o Lived in more arboreal environment o Probable bipedalism o Apelikes size, anatomy o Slightly smaller canines than chimps o Fragments of 5 individuals |
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Ethiopia o Likely developed from kadabba o Lived in a forested, floodplain environment o Apelike molars and premolars, thin enamel, but smaller incisors and canines o Probable bipedalism |
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Australopiticus anamensis |
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Kenya o May have develop from ramidus o Mixed habitat of open grassland bushy areas, forest o Apelike teeth but larger/wider molars and thicker enamel o Probable bipedalism |
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australopithecus afarensis |
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Tanzania & etheopia o Maybe developed from anamensis o Mixed habitat of forest edge/savannah and open grassland savannah o Teeth are mized: apelike and humnlike features o Bipedalism-skelatal evidence, footprints at laetoli o “lucy” |
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o at this time, the australopithecines, a type of hominin, branched into several possible lines along a gracile and robust continuum o many of these lines went extinct 1 continued evolving. |
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Australopithecus africanus |
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o May have developed from afarensis;gracile o South Africa o Bipedal o Teeth are mixed; apelike and humanlike features o Mixed omnivorous diet, emphasis on tough plant foods |
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Australopithecus (paranthropus) robustus |
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• May have developed from africanus, but may have lived at the same time • South Africa • Bipedal • Teeth are mixed; apelike and humanlike features • Mixed omnivorous diet • Slightly bigger in body and brain to africanus- more “robust” |
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Australopithecusboisei (paranthropus boisei) |
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• May have developed from afarensis • East Africa • Bipedal • Almost same size as africanus, robustus • Teeth arem mized (ape/human) but.. largest postcanine teeth of any APC . HUGA molars, similar to a gorilla • Diet focused on low quality, tough plant foods • Extinct due to climate/ habitat change |
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ethipoia • Worlds earliest stone tools (pebble tools) dated to same strata at nearby site • Garhi found along evidence for butchering – some stone tools, cut marks on bone, smashed bone • Meat and marrow are nutrient rich • Mixed omnivorous diet • Some teth like later homo species, but gracile features very similar to afarensis • Competitor to boisei? Or just contemporary • Link between afarensis and homo? |
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Tanzania • Larger brain, skull capacity • Reduced premolar and molar size= change in diet • Teeth size linked to jaw size; jaws more malleable, teeth size genetically determined. Less dependence on tough plant foods. Less demanding chewing=smaller jaws=favoring of smaller teeth • Precision grip – better hands • Short, with ape-like limbs |
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Kenya • Larger brain/skull capacity than habilis • Molars and teeth like a hyper-robust APC • Different species? Larger specimen of habilis? |
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o The Pleistocene geological epoch |
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• Early: 2.0-1 m.y.a. • Middle: 1 m.y.a – 130,000 b.p.(ice ages begn) • Late 130,000-10,000 b.p. b(ice age ends with the Holocene geological epoch) |
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• Developed out of homo habalis? • Would have been a short time span, relative to other developments • Punctuated equilibrium? The hypothesis that evolutionary development is marked by isolated episodes of rapid speciation between long periods of little or no change • A combination of biological and behavioral changes separated H. erectus from others. |
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Cranial/skull changes in Homo Erectus |
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Larger brain/braincase Smaller post-canine teeth Larger incisors Thicker brow ridge Smaller jaw Slightly shorter face Much taller, larger body size than austrlopithecines and H. habilis / rudolfensis ~5-6 feet tall shorter arms longer legs more barrel-shaped chest/torso bifacial flaking techniques the Achreulian hand axe flakes as fast tools, fine cutting the first “tool kit” with different tools made and used for different tasks |
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hunting and gathering economy in homo erectus |
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increased size = formidable mammal increased size = need more calories more meat! Hunting/ butchereing of large mammals more common Plant foods still important This is a “mixed economy” and the strategy that has served humans for most of our history |
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controlled use of fire in homo erectus |
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heat, light, cooking, protection against predators |
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• Africa, middle east, Europe, asia • Features beru among different populations Neandertals don’t all look the same • Some generalizations in body form, behavior. |
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o Generalized cranial traits: • Occipital bun • Projecting mid-face • Low, flat, elongated skull • Prominent brow ridge • Very large incisors = used as tools • No projecting chin • Flat, wide, projecting nose • Brain size smaller or lightly larger than AMHs o Generalized postcranial (below skull) traits • Very robust strong build • ~5-6 feet tall • large, barrel shaped torso/chest • wide shoulders long collar bones • longer femurs in ratio to tibia/fibula in AMHs |
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• top-level carnivores, perhaps eating only meat or primarily meat • effective hunters: mammoths, bear, reindeer, bison, horses, wooly rhinos • coordinated hunting/ animal drives • controlled use of fire • distinct tool kit: Mousterian, flake tools • bone tools: awls and pins • wear on bone and stone tools shows cutting/ scraping animal hides: clothes and shelter. • Cave burials: flower pollen, animal bones, red powder = increasing ritual for dead |
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o originated in Africa, went basically everywhere o distinct biological and behavioral traits from earlier forms, neandertal |
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biological traits in humans |
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• vertical forehead, rather than sloping • smaller incisors • reduction/loss of prominent brow ridge • prominent, projecting chin • less barrel-shaped chest/torso • longer arms and legs in relation to torso • in general, less robust/more gracile than neadertal |
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behavioral traits in humans |
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• a blade is a specialized flake, at least twice as long as it is wide • made from a prepared core • blade tools are more efficient than flake tools – less material is wasted, more cutting edges are available • blade tools made working wood, bone, etc. much easier. • Bone tools: fish hooks, needles, pins, knives, harpoons • Stone and bone beads • Ornaments • Stone, bone, ivory figurines |
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behavioral modernity in humans |
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• Abstract thought, used symbols • Language • Exchange/trade • Increasingly complex tool kits • Art • Music • Games • Increasingly complex burial treatment |
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what happened to neandertals? |
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• Outcompeted/replaced by AMH around 35,000-30,000 bp • AMH were more successful • How often and in what ways did they interact? Replacement v. hybridization |
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the study of the past through the systematic recovery and analysis of material remains |
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• the concept of culture unites the subfields of anthropology • learned • shared • symbolic |
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• the concept of culture unites the subfields of anthropology • learned • shared • symbolic |
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• an adaptive perspective is primarily concerned with “culture as a system” • social and cultural differences are viewed as responses to the material parameters of life, such as food, shelter and reproduction |
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• this perspective emphasizes ideas, thoughts and shared knowledge and sees symbols and their meanings as crucial to shaping human behavior • according to the ideational view of culture, one cannot comprehend human behavior without understanding the symbolic code for behavior |
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finding archaeological sites |
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• an archeological site is any place where material evidence exists about the human past • archaeological sites are found in different ways, and there is no single formula to finding them • luck and hard work are the major keys; sites are also found through systematic survey |
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topographic/contour mapping |
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elevation LiDAR (light detection and ranging) surface collecting |
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collection squares pottery flint blades obsidian/flint |
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geographical perspection map variation in the physical properties of the earth electromagnetic conductivity magnetometry electrical resistivity GPR |
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cheapest method dig holes in the ground and see what comes up pottery shards |
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what are the archeologists data? |
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artifacts ecofacts features fossils |
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the oldest material is at the bottom |
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• Dominant factor in forming the archeological record o Discard- everything eventually breaks or wears out and is discarded o Loss- example: an arrow that misses its target or a pot left at a camp o Caching- some items are intentionally left behind o Ritual- example: grave goods |
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• Archeologists document patterns in how material culture changes through time and across space • Organizing data into meaningful patterns is vital to the field of archaeology |
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• Archeologists document patterns in how material culture changes through time and across space • Organizing data into meaningful patterns is vital to the field of archaeology |
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there is a process by which people made their stone tools |
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we can find out what people ate by looking at ecofacts |
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testing carbon to see the age |
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grows one ring every year. lots of rain=big rings |
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