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Presidential Professor Emeritus of Anthropology Philip Bock dies

Presidential Professor Emeritus of Anthropology Philip Bock dies
unm.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from unm.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

La Arqueología de Catamarca en el Bicentenario de l

La Arqueología de Catamarca en el Bicentenario de l
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the paradigms of contemporary archaeology (idea) by Scribe

Mon May 23 2005 at 3:33:43 In Scandinavia Christian Thomsen sThree Age System had emerged from the 19th century as a way of interpreting prehistoric excavation sites and the materials within. He had concluded that different time periods were signified by a shift in the materials that tools were made from. Hence the Stone, Bronze and Iron ages. Although it later proved to be useful only regionally, it was a step towards figuring out a methodology for interpreting archaeological findings. At the turn of the 20th century archaeologists began seeking ways to devise theories that would explain the archaeological record in terms of culture, rather than time period. Thus was born the Culture-History paradigm.

Behaviour: Hunter-gatherer humans mirror mammals and birds living in the same areas, study finds

Foraging humans, mammals and birds who live in the same place behave similarly

 E-Mail Foraging humans find food, reproduce, share parenting, and even organise their social groups in similar ways as surrounding mammal and bird species, depending on where they live in the world, new research has found. The study, published today in Science, shows environmental factors exert a key influence on how foraging human populations and non-human species behave, despite their very different backgrounds. The team of international researchers analysed data from more than 300 locations around the world, observing the behaviours of foraging human populations alongside other mammal and bird species living in the same place. Their findings show that for almost all behaviours, 14 of the 15 investigated, humans were more likely to behave similarly to the majority of other non-human species living in the same place than those elsewhere.

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