Literature DB >> 25914360

A new research strategy for integrating studies of paleoclimate, paleoenvironment, and paleoanthropology.

Curtis W Marean, Robert J Anderson, Miryam Bar-Matthews, Kerstin Braun, Hayley C Cawthra, Richard M Cowling, Francois Engelbrecht, Karen J Esler, Erich Fisher, Janet Franklin, Kim Hill, Marco Janssen, Alastair J Potts, Rainer Zahn.   

Abstract

Paleoanthropologists (scientists studying human origins) universally recognize the evolutionary significance of ancient climates and environments for understanding human origins. Even those scientists working in recent phases of human evolution, when modern humans evolved, agree that hunter-gatherer adaptations are tied to the way that climate and environment shape the food and technological resource base. The result is a long tradition of paleoanthropologists engaging with climate and environmental scientists in an effort to understand if and how hominin bio-behavioral evolution responded to climate and environmental change. Despite this unusual consonance, the anticipated rewards of this synergy are unrealized and, in our opinion, will not reach potential until there are some fundamental changes in the way the research model is constructed. Discovering the relation between climate and environmental change to human origins must be grounded in a theoretical framework and a causal understanding of the connection between climate, environment, resource patterning, behavior, and morphology, then move beyond the strict correlative research that continues to dominate the field.
© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  agent based model; behavioral ecology; foraging theory; paleoanthropology; paleoclimates

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25914360     DOI: 10.1002/evan.21443

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Evol Anthropol        ISSN: 1060-1538


  7 in total

1.  Early hominins evolved within non-analog ecosystems.

Authors:  J Tyler Faith; John Rowan; Andrew Du
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2019-10-07       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Seasonal availability of edible underground and aboveground carbohydrate resources to human foragers on the Cape south coast, South Africa.

Authors:  Jan C De Vynck; Richard M Cowling; Alastair J Potts; Curtis W Marean
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2016-02-18       Impact factor: 2.984

Review 3.  Toward high-resolution population genomics using archaeological samples.

Authors:  Irina Morozova; Pavel Flegontov; Alexander S Mikheyev; Sergey Bruskin; Hosseinali Asgharian; Petr Ponomarenko; Vladimir Klyuchnikov; GaneshPrasad ArunKumar; Egor Prokhortchouk; Yuriy Gankin; Evgeny Rogaev; Yuri Nikolsky; Ancha Baranova; Eran Elhaik; Tatiana V Tatarinova
Journal:  DNA Res       Date:  2016-07-19       Impact factor: 4.458

4.  Modelling the role of groundwater hydro-refugia in East African hominin evolution and dispersal.

Authors:  M O Cuthbert; T Gleeson; S C Reynolds; M R Bennett; A C Newton; C J McCormack; G M Ashley
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2017-05-30       Impact factor: 14.919

5.  Lithic technological responses to Late Pleistocene glacial cycling at Pinnacle Point Site 5-6, South Africa.

Authors:  Jayne Wilkins; Kyle S Brown; Simen Oestmo; Telmo Pereira; Kathryn L Ranhorn; Benjamin J Schoville; Curtis W Marean
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-03-29       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Regional patterns of diachronic technological change in the Howiesons Poort of southern Africa.

Authors:  Manuel Will; Nicholas J Conard
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-09-17       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  The Late Middle Pleistocene mammalian fauna of Oumm Qatafa Cave, Judean Desert: taxonomy, taphonomy and palaeoenvironment.

Authors:  Nimrod Marom; Ignacio A Lazagabaster; Roee Shafir; Filipe Natalio; Vera Eisenmann; Liora Kolska Horwitz
Journal:  J Quat Sci       Date:  2022-03-14
  7 in total

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