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Academic & Professional Books  History & Other Humanities  Archaeology

The First Africans African Archaeology from the Earliest Toolmakers to Most Recent Foragers

By: Lawrance Barham and Peter Mitchell
602 pages, b/w photos, b/w illustrations, b/w maps
The First Africans
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  • The First Africans ISBN: 9780521612654 Paperback Jun 2008 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 6 days
    £31.99
    #175774
  • The First Africans ISBN: 9780521847964 Hardback Jun 2008 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 6 days
    £66.99
    #175775
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About this book Contents Customer reviews Related titles

About this book

Africa has the longest record--some 2.5 million years--of human occupation of any continent. For nearly all of this time, its inhabitants have made tools from stone and have acquired their food from its rich wild plant and animal resources. Archaeological research in Africa is crucial for understanding the origins of humans and the diversity of hunter-gatherer ways of life.

This book is a synthesis of the record left by Africa's earliest hominin inhabitants and hunter-gatherers, combining the insights of archaeology with those of other disciplines, such as genetics and palaeo-environmental science. African evidence is critical to important debates, such as the origins of stone tool making, the emergence of recognisably modern forms of cognition and behaviour, and the expansion of successive hominins from Africa to other parts of the world.

Contents

1. Introducing the African record
2. Frameworks in space and time
3. First tool users and makers
4. Early Pleistocene foragers
5. Mid-Pleistocene foragers
6. Transitions and origins
7. The Big Dry: the archaeology of marine isotope 4-2
8. Hunting, gathering, intensifying: the mid-Holocene record
9. Foragers in a world of farmers
10. The future of the first Africans' past

Customer Reviews

By: Lawrance Barham and Peter Mitchell
602 pages, b/w photos, b/w illustrations, b/w maps
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