期刊论文详细信息
PLoS One
Form and Function of Early Neolithic Bifacial Stone Tools Reflects Changes in Land Use Practices during the Neolithization Process in the Levant
Richard W. Yerkes1  Ran Barkai2  Hamudi Khalaily3 
[1]Department of Anthropology, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, United States of America
[2]Department of Archaeology, Tel-Aviv University, Tel-Aviv, Israel
[3]Israel Antiquities Authority, Jerusalem, Israel
关键词: Neolithic period;    Paleoanthropology;    Wood;    Forests;    Climate change;    Paleoclimatology;    Trees;    Agriculture;   
DOI  :  10.1371/journal.pone.0042442
学科分类:医学(综合)
来源: Public Library of Science
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【 摘 要 】
For many, climate change is no longer recognized as the primary cause of cultural changes in the Near East. Instead, human landscape degradation, population growth, socioeconomic adjustments, and conflict have been proposed as the mechanisms that shaped the Neolithic Revolution. However, as Bar-Yosef noted, even if there is chronological correlation between climate changes and cultural developments, what is important is to understand how Neolithic societies dealt with these improving or deteriorating environments. Changes in bifacial stone tools provide a framework for examining some of these interactions by focusing on changing land use practices during the Neolithization process. The results of microwear analysis of 40 bifacial artifacts from early Pre-Pottery Neolithic (EPPNB) levels at Motza in the Judean hills document changes during the PPNA–PPNB transition at the onset of the Levantine Moist Period (ca. 8000 cal B.C.) when conditions for agriculture improved. EPPNB villagers added heavy-duty axes to a toolkit they had used for carpentry and began to clear forests for fields and grazing lands. Sustainable forest management continued for the duration of the PPN until the cumulative effects of tree-felling and overgrazing seem to have led to landscape degradation at end of the Pre-Pottery Neolithic C (PPNC), when a cold, dry climatic anomaly (6600–6000 cal B.C.) may have accelerated the reduction of woodlands. Early PPNB components at sites like Motza, with data from nearly five millennia of Neolithic occupations, show how complex hunter–gatherers and early food producers were able to establish sustainable resource management systems even as climate changed, population increased, and social relations were redefined.
【 授权许可】

CC BY   

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