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Posing Questions for a Scientific Archaeology
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Book Code: H753
ISBN: 0-89789-753-6
ISBN-13: 978-0-89789-753-2
328 pages, figures,maps,photographs,table
Bergin & Garvey
Publication: 6/30/2001
List Price: $119.95 (UK Sterling Price: £70.00)
Availability: Out of stock
Media Type: Hardcover
Also Available: Ebook
Trim Size: 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects: Reviews:
  • ...suited for professional archaeologists and graduate students.
    —Choice
    March 2002
  • A lot of work, effort, and time is involved in the doing of evolutionary archaeology. Exisiting data cannot be used to address evolutionary questions. We must learn aspects of disciplines that hold an essentialist ontology and that focus on immanent (atemporal and aspatial or universal) properties and processes. Darwinian evolution comprises a theory that, with some thoughtful work, provides explanations rather than interpretations. Doing evolutionary archaeology will be rewarding because of the theoretically founded- and thus empirically testable-conclusion that it will generate. This is a book well worth having.
    —Journal of Anthropological Research
    2002
Description: Although many believe that archaeological knowledge consists simply of empirical findings, this notion is false; data are generated with the guidance of theory, or some sense-making system acting in its place whether researchers recognize this or not. Failure to understand the relationship between theory and the empirical world has led to the many debates and frustrations of contemporary archaeology. Despite years of trying, the atheoretical, empiricist foundations of archaeology have left us little but a history of storytelling and unsatisfying generalizations about historical change and human diversity. The present work offers promising directions for building theoretically defensible results by providing well-designed case studies that can be used as guides or exemplars. Evolutionary theory, in at least some form, is the foundation for a scientific archaeology that will yield scientific explanations for historical change.
Table of Contents:
  • Preface
  • Posing Questions for a Scientific Archaeology by Terry L. Hunt, Carl P. Lipo, and Sarah L. Sterling
  • Building Components of Evolutionary Explanation: A Study of Wedge Tools from Northern South America by Kimberly D. Kornbacher
  • The Engineering and Evolution of Hawaiian Fishhooks by Michael T. Pfeffer
  • Building the Framework for An Evolutionary Explanation of Projectile Point Variation: An Example from the Central Mississippi River Valley by Kris H. Wilhelmsen
  • Social Complexity in Ancient Egypt: Functional Differentiation Reflected in the Distribution of Standardized Ceramics by Sarah L. Sterling
  • Community Structures in Late Mississippian Populations of the Central Mississippi Valley by Carl P. Lipo
  • Dietary Variation and Village Settlement in the Ohio Valley by Diana M. Greenlee
  • Resource Intensification and Late Holocene Human Impacts on Pacific Coast Bird Populations: Evidence from the Emeryville Shellmound Avifauna by Jack Broughton
  • Evolutionary Bet-Hedging and the Hopewell Cultural Climax by Mark E. Madsen
  • Index
LC Card Number: 00-037834
LCC Class: CC72
Dewey Class: 930
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