Explaining variability in Early Paleoindian foraging
نویسندگان
چکیده
We have argued elsewhere [Cannon, M.D., Meltzer, D.J., 2004. Early Paleoindian foraging: examining the faunal evidence for large mammal specialization and regional variability in prey choice. Quaternary Science Reviews 23, 1955–1987] that the North American archaeofaunal record provides little support for the notion that Early Paleoindians across the continent practiced a uniform subsistence strategy focused on the specialized hunting of large mammals; rather, there is some evidence for regional variability in human subsistence during the Early Paleoindian period (ca. 11,500–10,800 C yr BP). Here, we further explore the archaeofaunal evidence for regional variability in subsistence behavior, focusing in particular on diet breadth and on the degree to which diets were dominated by largebodied mammals. We also show how geographic variability in Early Paleoindian foraging can be understood in relation to environmental variability by employing a foraging theory model of patch choice in fractal environments [Ritchie, M.E., 1998. Scaledependent foraging and patch choice in fractal environments. Evolutionary Ecology 12, 309–330]. Broad-scale patterns of regional variability in Early Paleoindian prey choice are consistent with the explanation—derived from the fractal patch choice model in conjunction with paleoenvironmental data on the ‘‘grain-size’’ of terminal Pleistocene environments—that the subsistence strategies of early Americans were sensitive to the tradeoff between searching for and foraging in resource patches in a patchy environment, and that those strategies varied in response to the heterogeneity of the environments that different early American groups inhabited. We conclude by briefly critiquing the use of foraging theory in Early Paleoindian research and by presenting suggestions for future improvements in our understanding of Early Paleoindian subsistence. r 2008 Elsevier Ltd and INQUA. All rights reserved.
منابع مشابه
Early Paleoindian foraging: examining the faunal evidence for large mammal specialization and regional variability in prey choice
North American archaeologists have spent much effort debating whether Early Paleoindian foragers were specialized hunters of megafauna or whether they pursued more generalized subsistence strategies. In doing so, many have treated the foraging practices of early North Americans as if they must have been uniform across the continent, even though others have pointed out that adaptations appear to...
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