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Bezig met laden... Mensen in de steentijd: jagers-verzamelaars en eerste boeren 10000 tot 2000 v.Cdoor Goran Burenhult
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Onderdeel van de reeks(en)Ihmisen suku (2)
American Museum of Natural History. General editor, Goran Burehnult. Geen bibliotheekbeschrijvingen gevonden. |
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Google Books — Bezig met laden... GenresDewey Decimale Classificatie (DDC)930.12History and Geography Ancient World Ancient History Archaeology Paleolithic Age [Old Stone Age] & Comprehensive Stone Age WorksLC-classificatieWaarderingGemiddelde:
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"The Great Transition" deals with what now appears to be pleiotropic development of Agriculture in Southwest Asia between 10,000 and 4000 BC by specializing hunter-gatherers.
"Hunter-gatherers and Farmers in Africa" introduces 10,000 BC evidence from across various climatic zones of Africa.
"Stone Age hunter-gatherers and farmers in Europe" looks at the mesalithic communities. "The Megalith Builders of Western Europe" describes the stone building cultures which flourished between 4800 and 2800 BC.
"Bronze Age Chiefdoms and the End of Stone Age Europe" deals with introduction of metallurgy in Europe between 4500 and 750 BC.
"Stone Age Farmers in Southern and Eastern Asia" is a study of rice farming cultures between 6000 BC and AD 1000.
"Pacific Explorers" embraces the root crop cultures of Niu Gini and Melanesia.
"Farmers of the New World" describes cultures in the Americas between 10,000 BC and AD 1492.
"Why Only Some Became Farmers" presents reasons why some cultures did not adopt farming or herding as part of their subsistence strategy, looking at Inuit, Thule, and Arctic hunters and fishers of Eurasia.
Finally, a chapter on "Australia" follows the development of Aboriginal subsistence through their archeological remains. Includes the "tide riders" who built otherwise un-propeled rafts which could carry several people and their dingoes. [226] Shell middens date back to 28,000 years ago, although sea levels have drowned many coastal sites. Fragments of returning boomerangs over 10,000 years old have been found. [225]
DOGS. "The first animal to be domesticated was the dog." [68] From a grave in Israel, dated about 13,500 years ago.
39 Contributors with short biographies. Glossary and Index. ( )