نتایج جستجو برای: hunter gatherers

تعداد نتایج: 6282  

2016
M. Gallego-Llorente S. Connell E. R. Jones D. C. Merrett Y. Jeon A. Eriksson V. Siska C. Gamba C. Meiklejohn R. Beyer S. Jeon Y. S. Cho M. Hofreiter J. Bhak A. Manica R. Pinhasi

The agricultural transition profoundly changed human societies. We sequenced and analysed the first genome (1.39x) of an early Neolithic woman from Ganj Dareh, in the Zagros Mountains of Iran, a site with early evidence for an economy based on goat herding, ca. 10,000 BP. We show that Western Iran was inhabited by a population genetically most similar to hunter-gatherers from the Caucasus, but ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2014
Joseph K Pickrell Nick Patterson Po-Ru Loh Mark Lipson Bonnie Berger Mark Stoneking Brigitte Pakendorf David Reich

The history of southern Africa involved interactions between indigenous hunter-gatherers and a range of populations that moved into the region. Here we use genome-wide genetic data to show that there are at least two admixture events in the history of Khoisan populations (southern African hunter-gatherers and pastoralists who speak non-Bantu languages with click consonants). One involved popula...

2017
Joseph R. Burger Vanessa P. Weinberger Pablo A. Marquet

Humans, like all organisms, are subject to fundamental biophysical laws. Van Valen predicted that, because of zero-sum dynamics, all populations of all species in a given environment flux the same amount of energy on average. Damuth's 'energetic equivalence rule' supported Van Valen´s conjecture by showing a tradeoff between few big animals per area with high individual metabolic rates compared...

Journal: :Current anthropology 2014
Barry S Hewlett Steve Winn

Few studies exist of allomaternal nursing in humans. It is relatively common among some cultures, such as the Aka and Efé hunter-gatherers of the Congo Basin, but it does not occur in other foragers such as the !Kung and Hadza of Southern and East Africa. This paper utilizes focal follow observations of Aka and Efé infants, interviews with Aka mothers, ethnographic reports from researchers work...

2012
Mitsuo ICHIKAWA M. ICHIKAWA

While tropical rainforests in central Africa are often assumed as “green desert” where human cannot live by entirely depending on wild food resources, recent studies suggest that hunter-gatherers could survive there even in the dry season, when food resources are relatively scarce. Newly found archaeological investigations also suggest the existence of early, hunter-gatherers’ habitation in the...

Journal: :Evolutionary human sciences 2023

Abstract Here we investigate the effects of extensive sociality and mobility on oral microbiome 138 Agta hunter–gatherers from Philippines. Our comparisons composition showed that are more similar to Central African BaYaka than neighbouring farmers. We also defined social as a set 137 bacteria (only 7% 1980 amplicon sequence variants) significantly influenced by contact (quantified through wire...

Journal: :Current Biology 2018
Asifa Majid Nicole Kruspe

People struggle to name odors [1-4]. This has been attributed to a diminution of olfaction in trade-off to vision [5-10]. This presumption has been challenged recently by data from the hunter-gatherer Jahai who, unlike English speakers, find odors as easy to name as colors [4]. Is the superior olfactory performance among the Jahai because of their ecology (tropical rainforest), their language f...

2016
Karl J. Reinhard Dennis R. Danielson

Our previous analysis of phytolith content of coprolites showed that calcium oxalate phytoliths from desert food plants caused dental microwear among prehistoric Texas hunter-gatherers. We demonstrated that phytoliths from desert succulents were ubiquitous and abundant in hunter-gatherer coprolites. We found that calcium oxalate phytoliths were harder than human dental enamel. We concluded that...

2001
Peter Bellwood

■ Abstract The consequences of early agricultural development in several regions of the Old and New Worlds included population growth, the spread of new material cultures and of food-producing economies, the expansions of language families, and in many cases the geographical expansions of the early farming populations themselves into territories previously occupied by hunters and gatherers. Thi...

Journal: :American journal of physical anthropology 2007
Patrick Mahoney

Dietary hardness and abrasiveness are inferred from human dental microwear at Ohalo II, a late Upper Palaeolithic site (22,500-23,500 cal BP) in the southern Levant. Casts of molar grinding facets from two human skeletons were examined with a scanning electron microscope. The size and frequency of microwear was measured, counted, and compared to four prehistoric human groups from successive chr...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید