Syllabus/achievement requirements

ARK2120/4120-Hunters and Gatherers and Stone Age Technology

Digital compendium here (log in with your student ID and password to gain access).

Spring 2020

Literature marked (*) will be available in compendiums. Literature marked (C) will be available in Canvas. 

 

Technology theory

(€) Burmeister, S. 2017. Innovation as a Possibility. Technological ansd Social Determinism in Their Dialectical Resolution. In S. Burmeister & R. Bernbeck (eds) The Interplay of People and Technologies. Archaeological Case Studies on Innovations, 21¨C42. Berlin: edition topoi

*Dobres, Marcia-Anne ¡°Engendering the Cha?ne Op¨¦ratoire: Methodological Considerations¡± and ¡°A Future for Technology¡¯s Past¡± i: Technology and Social Agency: Outlining a Practice Framework for Archaeology, 2000. Oxford: Blackwell. p 164-211. (47 pages)

* Dobres, Marcia-Anne and Christopher R. Hoffman ¡°Introduction: A Context for the Present and Future of Technology Studies¡± i: The Social Dynamics of Technology : Practice, Politics, and World Views, 1999. Washington, D.C. : Smithsonian Institution Press. p 1-19. (18 pages)

* Edmonds, Mark ¡°Description, Understand and the Cha?ne Op¨¦ratoire¡± i : Technology in the humanities, Archaeological Review from Cambridge. Summer, 1990. Cambridge: Department of Archaeology. 9:1. p 55-70.(15 pages)

* Hodder, Ian ¡°In Technology in the Humanities: A Commentary¡± i: Technology in the humanities, Archaeological Review from Cambridge. Summer, 1990. Cambridge: Department of Archaeology. 9:1. p 154-157. (3 pages)

 

Stone technology

*Bodu, P. Karlin, C and Ploux, S. ¡°Who¡¯s Who? The Magdalenian Flintknappers of Pincevent, France¡± i: The big puzzle: International Symposium on Refitting Stone Artefacts, Monrepos, 1987 , red: E. Cziesla, S. Eickhoff, N.Arts and D. Winter, 1990. Monrepos. Studies in Modern Archaeology; 1 , Bonn : Holos. p 143-163. (20 pages)

* Luedtke, Barbara E. ¡°Altered Cherts¡± i : An Archaeologist¡¯s Guide to Chert and Flint, 1992. Archaeological Research Tools 7, Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles. p 91-103. (12 pages)

* Pelegrin, Jacques ¡°Prehistoric Lithic Technology: Some Aspects of Research¡± i: Technology in the humanities, Summer, 1990. Archaeological Review from Cambridge. Cambridge: Department of Archaeology. 9:1 . p 116-125. (9 pages)

Refitting Stone Artefacts, Monrepos, 1987. Holos, Bonn, p 447-464. (17 pages)

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(C) Ambrose, S. H. 2001 Paleolithic Technology and Human Evolution. Science, (291): p 1748-1753. (5 pages)

(C) Ambrose, S. H. 2001 Middle and Later Stone Age Settlement Patterns in the Central Rift Valley, Kenya: Comparisons and Contrasts. In Conard, N. J. (Ed.) Settlement Dynamics of the Middle Paleolithic and Middle Stone Age. T¨¹bingen, Kerns Verlag. p 21-44 (22 pages)

(C) Andrefsky, W. J. 2006 The application and misapplication of mass analysis in lithic debitage studies. Journal of Archaeological Science, (34): p 392-402. (10 pages)

(C) Andrefsky, W.J., 2009. The Analysis of Stone Tool Procurement, Production, and Maintenance. Journal of Archaeological Research 17, p 65-103. (38 pages)

 (C) Blumenschine, R. J., Masao, F. T., Tactikos, J. C. & Ebert, J. I. 2008 Effects of distance from stone source on landscape-scale variation in Oldowan artifact assemblages in the Paleo-Olduvai Basin, Tanzania. Journal of Archaeological Science, 35. p 76-86. (10 pages)

(C) Bo?da, E., Geneste, J. M., Griggo, C., Mercier, N., Muhesen, S., Reyss, J. L., Taha, A. & Valladas, H. 1999 A Levallois point embedded in the vertebra of a wild ass (Equus africanus): hafting, projectiles and Mousterian hunting weapons. Antiquity,3. p 394-402. (8 pages)

(C) Baales, M. 2001 From Lithics to Spatial and Social Organization: Interpreting the Lithic Distribution and Raw Material Composition at the Final Palaeolithic Site of Kettig (Central Rhineland, Germany). Journal of Archaeological Science, 28. p 127-141. (14 pages)

(C)Carr, P.J., Bradbury, A.P., 2011. Learning From Lithics: A Perspective on the Foundation and Future of the Organization of Technology. PalaeoAnthropology, p 305-319. (14 pages)

 (C) Dibble, H. L., Philip G. Chase, Shannon P. McPherron & Tuffreau, A. 1997 Testing the Reality of a 'Living Floor' with Archaeological Data. American Antiquity, 62 (4): p 629-651. (22 pages)

(C) Eren, M.I., Roos, C.I., Story, B.A., von Cramon-Taubadel, N., Lycett, S.J., 2014. The role of raw material differences in stone tool shape variation: an experimental assessment. Journal of Archaeological Science 49, p 472-487. (15 pages)

(C) Minichillo, T. 2006 Raw material use and behavioral modernity: Howiesons Poort lithic foraging strategies. Journal of Human Evolution, 50. p 359-364. (5 pages)

(C) Pargeter, J., 2013. Rock type variability and impact fracture formation: working towards a more robust macrofracture method. Journal of Archaeological Science 40, p 4056-4065. (9 pages)

(C) Shott, M. J. & Weedman, K. J. 2007 Measuring reduction in stone tools: an ethnoarchaeological study of Gamo hidescrapers from Ethiopia. Journal of Archaeological Science, 34. p 1016-1035. (19 pages)

(C) Sillitoe, P. & Hardy, K. 2003 Living Lithics: ethnoarchaeology in Highland Papua New Guinea. Antiquity, 77. p 555-566. (11 pages)

(C) Soressi, M., Geneste, J.-M., 2011. The History and Efficacy of the Cha?ne Op¨¦ratoire Approach to Lithic Analysis: Studying Techniques to Reveal Past Societies in an Evolutionary Perspective. PaleoAnthropology. p 334-350. (16 pages)

(C) Tostevin, G.B., 2011. Levels of theory and social practice in the reduction sequence and cha?ne op¨¦ratoire methods of lithic analysis. PaleoAnthropology 2011. p 351-375. (24 pages)

(C) Wadley, L. 2005 A Typological Study of the Final Middle Stone Age Stone Tools from Sibudu Cave, Kwazulu-Natal. South African Archaeological Bulletin, 60 (182). P 51¨C63. (12 pages)

(C) Wiessner, P. 1983 Style and Social Information in Kalahari San Projectile Points. American Antiquity, 48 (2). p 253-276. (23 pages)

(C) Wiessner, P. 2002 Hunting, healing, and hxaro exchange A long-term perspective on !Kung (Ju/¡¯hoansi) large-game hunting. Evolution and Human Behavior, 23. p 407¨C436. (29 pages)

 

Clay and Pottery Technology

€ Gosselain, O.P. 1992. Technology and style: potters and pottery among Bafia of Cameroon. Man?: the journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 27(3): p.559¨C586.

* Hayden, B. 1995. The Emergence if Prestige Technologies and Pottery. In W. K. Barnett & J. W. Hoopes (eds) The Emergence of Pottery. Technology and Innovation in Ancient Societies. Smithsonian Series in Archaeological Inquiry, 257¨C265. Washington/London: Smithsonian Institution Press

€ Spataro, M. 2018. Origins of Specialization: The Ceramic Cha?ne Op¨¦ratoire and Technological Take-Off at Vin?a-Belo Brdo, Serbia. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 37(3): p.247¨C265.

* Vitelli, K.D. 1995. Pots, Potters, and the Shaping of Greek Neolithic Society. In W. K. Barnett & J. W. Hoopes (eds) The Emergence of Pottery. Technology and Innovation in Ancient Societies, 55¨C63. Washington, London: Smithonian Institution Press 

 

Additional reading:

Crabtree, Don E.: An Introduction to Flintworking. , Second Edition. 1982. Occasional Papers of the Idaho Museum of Natural History, No. 28.

Helskog, Knut, Svein Indrelid og Egil Mikkelsen : ¡±Morfologisk klassifisering av sl?tte steinartefakter¡± , Oslo 1976. Universitetets Oldsaksamlingens ?rbok, 1972-1974. s. 9-40.

Inizan, M.-L., Reduron-Ballinger, M., Roche , H. & Tixier, J. 1999 Technology and Terminology of Knapped Stone, Nanterre, CREP.

Whittaker, John C. ¡°Flintknapping: Basic Principles¡±, ¡°Raw Materials¡±, ¡°Hard hammer Percussion¡±, ¡°Pressure Flaking¡± and ¡°Using Stone Tools¡± i: Flintknapping : making and understanding stone tools, 1994. Austin, Texas : University of Texas Press, Austin. ss. 11-21, 65-78, 85-176, 243-257

 

Published Nov. 13, 2019 12:54 PM - Last modified May 25, 2020 10:32 AM