scholarly journals The Technological Condition of Human Evolution: Lithic Studies as Basic Science

2021 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shumon Tobias Hussain ◽  
Marie Soressi

AbstractThe recent elaboration and rapid expansion of aDNA, paleoproteomics, and related fields have propelled a profound “biomolecular turn” in archaeology and fundamentally changed the topology of archaeological knowledge production. Such a transformation of the archaeological research landscape is not without consequence for long-standing research practices in the field, such as lithic analysis. This special issue derives from the session Old Stones, New Eyes? organized by the authors at the UISPP World Congress in Paris in 2018, which aimed to explore the future of lithic studies. An underlying theme of our session was the felt need to respond to the increasing marginalization of lithic research in terms of its capacity to (1) contribute to the grand narratives of early human evolution and (2) better articulate the role and significance of lithic studies in interdisciplinary human origins research. In this editorial, we briefly outline some of the questions and challenges raised by the biomolecular turn and advocate for a more self-conscious and reflexive stance among lithic experts. We argue that lithic studies fulfill all necessary requirements to act as a basic science for human origins research and that its role and status depends less on technological advances, such as, e.g., improved computing facilities, novel analytical software, or automated shape capture technologies, than on continuous work on the conceptual and methodological foundations of inquiry. We finally draw attention to the unique capability of lithic studies to shed light on the human technological condition and illustrate this potential by introducing and briefly discussing the papers included in this issue.

Antiquity ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 63 (238) ◽  
pp. 153-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. A. Clark

Human origins research has had a long history of vigorous debate. Recent discussion has been no exception, the more so perhaps as the strands of evidence — anthropological, archaeological, and now molecular-biological — are sufficiently diverse that not many can be well placed to deal fairly with them all. Here issue is taken with Foley's cladistic view of human evolution, and with the ‘Garden of Eden’ hypothesis of a single source in Africa for modern human populations.


1991 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 207-226 ◽  
Author(s):  
Phyllis C. Lee

Of the diverse approaches to understanding patterns and processes in human evolution, a focus on the biology of behaviour using principles derived from the non-human primates may have some utility for archaeologists. This article seeks to outline some biologically-based areas that could prove fruitful in exploring the origins of human behaviour within the archaeological record. It attempts to initiate a dialogue between biologists, even with their limited understanding of the problems facing those working with human origins, and archaeologists, in the hope that this dialogue will move beyond a simple reductionist approach towards the goal of integrating behaviour into a more sophisticated biological perspective.


2018 ◽  
pp. 133-142
Author(s):  
Erika Lorraine Milam

This chapter considers the research of women anthropologists during this period. It shows how many anthropologists had fought to refute the picture of universal male authority implied by common narratives of human evolution were women, often at the very beginning of what turned out to be long, notable careers. Their research gave fuller form to a rhetorically powerful alternative to Man the Hunter in reconstructions of human origins—Woman the Gatherer. Like her partner, Woman the Gatherer found intellectual support in research on long-extinct human ancestors, studies of human cultures today, and animal behavior, with a new emphasis on field research among primates.


Palaeolithic and the study of it - F.F. Wenban-Smith & R.T. Hosfield (e.d.). Palaeolithic archaeology of the Solent river: proceedings of the Lithic Studics Society day meeting held at the Department of Archaeology, University of Southampton on Saturday 15th January 2000 (Lithic Studies Society Occasional Paper 7). vii+111 pages, 56 figures, 11 tables. 2001. London: Lithic Studies Society; 0-9513246-3-2 paperback £19.50. - Agnès Lamotte. Les industries à bifaces de l’Europe du Nord-Quest au Pléistocène moyen: l’apport des donnés des gisements du bassin de la Somme, de lșEscaut et de la Baie de St-Brieuc (British Archaeological Reports International series 932). vi+l79 pages, 88 figures, 221 tables. 2001. Oxford: Archaeopress; 1-84171-226-4 paperback £30. - Gisela Freund. Sesselfelsgrotte I: Grabungsverlauf und Stratigraphie (Forschungsprojekt ’Das Paläolithikum und Mesolithikum des Unteren Altmühltals Il’ Vol. I). 311 pages, 168 figures. 1998. Saarbrücken: Saarbrücker Druckerei; 3-930843-42-0 (ISSN 0480-9106) hardback. - Ian Metcalfe, Jeremy M.B. Smith, Mike Morwood & Iain Davidson (ed.). Faunal and floral migrafions and evolution in SE Asia-Australasia. 416 pages. 150 figures, 34 tables. 2001. Lisse: Balkema; 90-5809-349-2 hardback €119, US$130 & £122. - Raymond Corbey & Roebrokes Wil (ed.). Studying human origins: disciplinary history and epistemology. viii+174 pages, 1 figure, 3 tables. 2001. Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press: 90-5356-464-0 hardback.

Antiquity ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 76 (291) ◽  
pp. 240-240
Author(s):  
N. James

1994 ◽  
Vol 4 (7) ◽  
pp. 651-652 ◽  
Author(s):  
John F.Y. Brookfield

2014 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 359-383 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter C. Kjærgaard

ArgumentIn the 1920s there were still very few fossil human remains to support an evolutionary explanation of human origins. Nonetheless, evolution as an explanatory framework was widely accepted. This led to a search for ancestors in several continents with fierce international competition. With so little fossil evidence available and the idea of a Missing Link as a crucial piece of evidence in human evolution still intact, many actors participated in the scientific race to identify the human ancestor. The curious case of Homo gardarensis serves as an example of how personal ambitions and national pride were deeply interconnected as scientific concerns were sometimes slighted in interwar palaeoanthropology.


1995 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 487-490 ◽  
Author(s):  
C.M. Willermet ◽  
G.A. Clark

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