Physical remains of human activites recorded by archeoloogists
Can have different meanings
Any location with physical evidence of past human activity
Most sites are recorded by archaeologists dating from before 20,000 years ago are BASE CAMPS, HABITATION SITES, PICTOGRAPHS AND RESOURCE PROCESSING SITES
Artifacts and ecofacts are often in spesific patterns that can be identifed as a feature
Inferring that people are living at the site, at least on a temporary basis
Physical remains indicate that people were harvesting resources and/or processing them
Paintings on immovable rock surfaces (approx 45,000 years ago)
engravings made on rock surfaces (approx 30,000-12,000 years ago)
Any portable object that was manufactured, modified by or used by people
Non portabl entity that was created by humans
Plant, animal or mineral remains associated with human occuptaion
seeds, pollen, charcoal
Animal bone, teeth,hairs, hooves, horns
-Archaelogical record is incomplete
-Many aspects of past human cultures are not visable through material remains
-Sites are hard to find
-Fewer humans=less physical evidence
-Fewer kinds of material evidence of culture
-More mobile=less trash accumulation
-Many sites are destroyed by cultural (ex, war, construction) and natural processes(floods, erosion)
-Sea levels have changed
-Organic remains do not preserve as well as non-organic ones
-Sites/artifacts are often deliberetly abandoned
-Male bias=focus on specific types of remains/ activites
-Launguage used to talk about the past can be very damaging
1- Stone tools dating back to 2.6-3.3 million years ago
2-Marks on animal bones between 2.5-3.4 million years ago
-Variety of cultures existed
-Dozen difffernt huam species
-Most were living in open -woods savannah grasslands
-No pernment camps
-Mostly eating plant foods
-Scavenging/hunting
-Groups of approx 20 to 30 witj fluid membership
-No real division of labour between the sexes
-Transmission of knowledge plus culture through laungage
3 million-500,000 years ago
Homohabilis +homo erectus
500,000-40,000 years ago
Archaic homosapiens, homo heiddbergenisis + homo neanderlaensis
40,000-12,000 years ago
Homo-sapiens
Plant and animal remains, human skeletal remains, coprolites, human soft tissue and residue on artifacts can be used to study diet
Meat eating becomes more important approx- 2.5 million years ago
Analogies suggest groups of approx 25 to 30 was commom
Flusid membership =, exogamous
Lack of social stratification until upper palaeolithic
-Likely division of labour based on sex
Significance of meat and adoption of hunting stredigies increaced with homo erectus
Hunting big game would have required group cooperation and peristence hunting
Ability to control fire was very important
Unsure when it first started
Hard to tell if evidence of fire is natural or cultural
More kinds of foods could be eaten and fire increaced the nutritional value of others
Provided light/heat
Allowed advances in technology
Evidence of widespread control of fire by approx 40,000 years old
Lots of changes in technology during the Palaeolithic
tools are usually associated with homo habilis and flakes are struck off one site/end to create an unifacial tool
TOOLS are associated with homo erectus and were typically bifacial (flakes taken off both sides)
Acheulean handaxes are still not well understood
Dscovered in 2015 and may be associated with Australopithecus, Kenyanthropus or early homo?
approx. 3.3 million years ago
Spears have been used since at least 400,000 years ago
Bow/arrow= uncertain but likely during Upper Palaeolithic
Archaeologists do ethnographic reserch to better understand archaeogogicl record
archaeologits themselves will recreate ancient activites to better understand how they were done
Earilest undisutted evidence of art dates to at least 65,000 years ago
Became widespread and common starting 40,000 years ago
Cave art often associated with religion/ritual (Venus figurines)
-May be other hypotheses other then fertiity and sexuality