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Título
Shell Artefacts Production at 32,000-28,000 BP in Island Southeast Asia: Thinking across Media?
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Shell Artefacts
Island Southeast Asia
Behavioural modernity in Homo sapiens
Clasificación UNESCO
5505.01 Arqueología
5504.05 Prehistoria
Fecha de publicación
2007
Citación
ÁLVAREZ-FERNÁNDEZ, E. (2007): Comentario al artículo: SZABÓ, K.; BRUMM, A. & BELLWOOD, P. (2007): “Shell Artefacts Production at 32,000-28,000 BP in Island Southeast Asia: Thinking across Media?”. Current Anthropology 48 (5): 701-723 (715)
Resumen
[EN] The evolution of anatomical and behavioural modernity in Homo sapiens has been one of the key
focus areas in both archaeology and palaeoanthropology since their inception. Traditionally, interpretations
have drawn mainly on evidence from the many large and well-known sites in Europe,
but archaeological research in Africa and the Levant is increasingly altering and elaborating upon
our understanding of later human evolution. Despite the presence of a number of important early
modern human and other hominin sites in Southeast Asia, evidence from this region has not
contributed to the global picture in any significant way. Indeed, the acknowledged simplicity of lithic
assemblages has led generations of scholars to assume that Southeast Asia was far from the cutting
edge of behavioural evolution. Comparison of sophisticated shell tools fromlevels dated to 32,000–28,000
b.p. in eastern Indonesia with lithic artefacts recovered from the same levels and an assessment of rawmaterial
procurement suggest that using lithic technologies as markers of behavioural complexity may
be misleading in a Southeast Asian context and, indeed, may be hampering our efforts to assess
behavioural complexity in global and comparative frameworks
URI
ISSN
0011-3204
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