ORIGINS & SPREAD AGRIC PASTHARRIS DAVID R Smithsonian, 17 abr 1996 - 594 páginas "The transitions from hunting and gathering to agriculture had revolutionary consequences for human society, leading to the emergence of urban civilizations, and ultimately, to humanity's dependence on relatively few domesticated animals and plants. Though the subject has been studied extensively, results have typically been interpreted in terms of local cultural sequences. By contrast, The Origins and Spread of Agriculture and Pastoralism in Eurasia provides a continental-scale framework for examining the agricultural "revolution" from its inception nearly 10,000 years ago."--Back cover. |
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The Origins and Spread of Agriculture and Pastoralism in Eurasia David R. Harris No hay ninguna vista previa disponible - 1996 |
Términos y frases comunes
Abu Hureyra Aceramic Neolithic Ain Ghazal archaeological areas Asian Azraq barley Blumler bones Bottema Cambridge camel caprines Cavalli-Sforza Çayönü cereals China climatic colonization crops cultivation culture domestic animals early agriculture early neolithic East eastern ecological economy einkorn environment epipalaeolithic Europe evidence excavations expansion farmers fauna Fertile Crescent foraging forest Ganj Dareh genetic growth Guinea highlands Hillman Holocene human hunter-gatherers hunting increase Jeitun Jomon language families Lapita late Levant levels linguistic London Mediterranean Mehrgarh mesolithic millennium bc nature northern origins of agriculture Oxford pastoralism pattern period phase plants and animals Pleistocene pollen population pottery PPNB prehistory production radiocarbon dates region remains Research rice Rowley-Conwy sample seasonal settlement sheep and goat social societies Southeast southern Southwest Asia species spread steppe subsistence suggests Tell Abu Hureyra tion transition Uerpmann University Press Valley vegetation western wheat woodland Younger Dryas Zeist Zeribar Zohary zone Zvelebil