重新评估中石器时代晚期经济

Q1 Arts and Humanities Hunter Gatherer Research Pub Date : 2024-08-09 DOI:10.3828/hgr.2024.15
S. F. Hellerøe
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引用次数: 0

摘要

中石器时代晚期的狩猎采集者(即现在的丹麦)长期以来一直吸引着考古学家,自二十世纪中期以来,他们对其狩猎经济的考古遗迹进行了细致的研究。然而,这些研究(主要集中在生存方面)往往忽视了个人基于社会和环境背景的决定如何在很大程度上影响觅食行为,进而影响动物考古记录中观察到的模式。狩猎不仅是一种活动,也是一种塑造身份和社会纽带的文化实践,这强调了在中石器时代狩猎研究中考虑社会、象征和经济因素的重要性。本研究通过整合人类行为生态学(HBE)的理论框架,如最佳觅食理论(OFT)、代价信号理论(CST)和声望概念,弥补了这一空白。这样做的目的是阐明埃尔特博勒猎人选择猎物的复杂动机。通过使用简化的猎物选择模型(PCM)对丹麦埃尔特博勒时期(公元前 5400-3950 年)的五个遗址进行分析,本研究试图揭示影响狩猎行为的生态和社会因素之间的相互作用。研究结果将从最佳选择和声望的角度进行讨论,以研究这些考古遗址的猎物选择模式。
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Re-evaluating late Mesolithic economies
The late Mesolithic hunter-gatherers of what is now Denmark have long captivated archaeologists, who have meticulously studied the archaeological remains of their foraging economy since the mid-twentieth century. However, these studies – predominantly focused on subsistence – have often overlooked how individual decisions based on social and environmental settings can greatly structure foraging behaviours and, subsequently, the patterns observed in the zooarchaeological record. Perceiving hunting not just as an activity, but as a cultural practice shaping identities and social bonds, underscores the importance of considering social, symbolic and economic dimensions in Mesolithic hunting research. This study bridges this gap by integrating theoretical frameworks from human behavioural ecology (HBE), such as optimal foraging theory (OFT), costly signalling theory (CST) and notions of prestige. By doing so, it aims to elucidate the complex motivations underlying prey selection among the Ertebølle hunters. Through analysis of five sites from the Danish Ertebølle period (5400–3950 BC) using a simplified prey choice model (PCM), this research seeks to shed light on the interplay of ecological and social factors shaping hunting practices. The findings are discussed through the lens of optimal choice and prestige to examine patterns of prey selection at these archaeological sites.
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Hunter Gatherer Research
Hunter Gatherer Research Arts and Humanities-Archeology (arts and humanities)
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