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Thoughtful Hunters (Neanderthals)
Leiden University ^ | 1-2-2006

Posted on 01/02/2006 11:59:40 AM PST by blam

Thoughtful Hunters

An interdisciplinary research programme, 2004-2007, at the Faculty of Archaeology of Leiden University sponsored by the Netherlands Foundation for Scientific Research (NWO).

THe Research Programme

From about 500,000 BP onwards, Europe saw a continuous occupation by occasionally very small and rather isolated groups of hominins. The typical cold-adapted Neanderthals of the last glacial were the product of a long process of Neanderthalisation that developed during the last half million years under severe climatic stress. Over the last five years archaeological studies have shown that these Middle and Late Pleistocene hominins, in contrast to previous opinions, were capable hunters of a wide variety of large game. Studies of the stable isotopes from their skeletal remains strongly suggest that they were “top-level carnivores”, with animal protein constituting an important part of their diet.

As it's title suggests, the present research programme' Thoughtful Hunters? The Archaeology of Neanderthal Communication and Cognition', focuses on the behavioural and cognitive - next to cultural and technological - presuppositions of Neanderthal hunting. A key question is whether the 'quality education' needed to become an expert hunter was possible without the transcendence of the here and now and a release from proximity by symbolic and syntactical language?

This question will be addressed in terms of data and viewpoints provided by palaeolithic archaeology, primate evolutionary ecology, comparative anatomy, ethnography, and cognitive neuroscience. The program will build upon recent work on the dependence on hunting in connection with the size of home ranges in predators; the increase in energetically expensive brain size in connection with changes in diet and gender roles in hominins; physical-anthropological clues as to the sexual division of labor in Neanderthals; the considerable need of daily foraging returns in Neanderthals; simulated minimal palaeolithic group sizes and primatology-based predictions of palaeolithic group sizes; and the social setting of hunting in behavioural-ecological perspective.

In the picture emerging from this research sophisticated knowledge of animal behaviours as a prerequisite for hunting success seems to loom large. According to Kaplan et al. 2000 (p.170-172), hunting “is the most learning-intensive foraging strategy practiced by humans (…). Unlike most animals, which either sit and wait to ambush prey or use stealth and pursuit techniques, human hunters use a wealth of information to make context-specific decisions, both during the search phase of hunting and after prey is encountered. Specifically, information on ecology, seasonality, current weather, expected animal behaviour and fresh animal signs are all integrated to form multivariate mental modules of encounter probabilities that guide the search and are continually updated as conditions change.”

This information is collected, memorized and processed over large spaces. The skill-intensive nature of human hunting and the long learning process involved are illustrated dramatically by recently reported data on hunting return rates by age. Hunting the variety of sometimes very dangerous species we now know to have been hunted by Neanderthals in Pleistocene Europe must have required considerable experience, quality education, and years of intensive practice. Hence there was a strong evolutionary stimulus on cooperation and sharing information between older and younger members of a group. But to what extent was language involved?
Recent work on skills and their acquisition stresses creative mimetic/imitative routines and suggest the possibility of highly complex behaviours - such as seen in connection with megafauna hunting - without much need of linguistic representations.

It is only very recently that some palaeoanthropologists have come to realize that the network of interdependencies, such as the aforementioned ones, "allows us to construct hypotheses about those aspects of the lifestyles of our early ancestors that are not directly preserved in the fossil or archaeological records. It is also possible through this approach to construct models relevant to the broader adaptive niches of our early ancestors and the selective pressures that would have been important during the course of human evolutionary history” (Aiello 1998:25).
This methodological point is germane to the research program, which sets out to construct a model that puts constraints on interpretations of the cognitive and behavioural aspects of Neanderthal hunting.

The present program, Thoughtful Hunters? The Archaeology of Neanderthal Communication and Cognition, builds upon and is a spin-off of the successful interdisciplinary research program, Changing Views of Ice Age Foragers, 1993-1998, also at the Archaeology Department of Leiden University and sponsored by NWO/the Netherlands Foundation for Scientific Research.

SUBPROJECT 1: NEANDERTHAL COMMUNICATION AND LEARNING (KATHY MACDONALD, PHD)

This project will start with a review of the burgeoning research on communication among pre-modern hominins, including studies on animal communication and various theories on the emergence of full-fledged language. The aim of this review will be to identify some constraints on hypotheses about hominin communication, and identify likely scenarios for communication among Neanderthal hunters. Theories about Neanderthal communication need to take account of increasing archaeological evidence for relatively complex (technological and hunting) behaviours, and for changes in behaviour among later Neanderthals.

Ethnographic data on present-day hunting by traditional foragers and western hunters will be studied, with a focus on hunting difficulties and the learning processes behind hunting activities. What is the role of active, linguistic instruction rather than emulation or imitation (sensu Boesch and Tomasello, 1998)? What do people need to know in order to hunt successfully? What is the role of communication in human hunting? A relevant theoretical framework is constituted by the approach to knowledge and learning of skills advocated by Tim Ingold (2000). The results of this study will be brought to bear on what is known archaeologically on Neanderthal hunting, and the various theories on Neanderthal communication.

While most workers see hunting as the most learning-intensive foraging strategy practiced by humans, some do not share this view, and refuse to relate the extended youth of modern and earlier humans to such learning. This is an interesting viewpoint, which needs clarification, and provides a link to the themes of subproject 3.

SUBPROJECT 2: The Archaeology of Neanderthal Subsistence (Gerrit Dusseldorp, MA)

This research project consists of three related parts.

1) An extensive review of the hunting vs scavenging debate, with a focus on the possible relevance of earlier models – and especially the building blocks of the largely discredited Man the Hunter model – for current research. This part can profit from a rich literature on this topic, in particular various monographs and review papers dealing with this very issue, including recent work on hunting by chimpanzees and other primates.

2) Bringing in new evidence from Europe, ongoing work in the Levant, and new evidence from Olduvai Gorge and Koobi Fora, a chronological overview of hominin hunting and hunting techniques will be developed. Primate modelling and recent studies of chimpanzee hunting are used to make inferences regarding the earliest stages of hominin hunting.

3) There is an additional source of clues for imitative skill, planning depth, and complexity of communication, connected with data on hunting: the dynamic interplay between hominin mobility patterns and specialized as well as generalized activities in the landscape. Generating reconstructions of such dynamic systems from static archaeological data with considerable time-depth is not easy. Yet, there are ways of tackling this, such as the archaeological analysis of patterns of raw materials transport through the landscape and analysis of the chaines opératoires of certain artifact types (e.g., handaxes) at the landscape scale. Building upon such studies inferences will be made on how hunting hominins positioned themselves in the landscape.

SUBPROJECT 3: HominiN life Histories and the Human Niche (Najma Anwar, PhD)

This part of the project focuses on the constraints, in human evolutionary history, on anatomical and behavioural trade-offs in various environments and periods, in order elucidate the evolutionary pressures involved. Most behavioural or evolutionary-ecological studies have focused on modern humans, analyzing life histories, mating strategies, spatial behaviour, subsistence and cooperation. Such studies consistently stress the wide network of interrelated constraints and dependencies involved with any of these issues. In line with this, Subproject 3 consists in building a biological-anthropological skeleton of the social behaviour of Neanderthals, drawing upon previous work by Aiello (1998) and Roebroeks (2001). Interdependencies stressed by various disciplines will be evaluated and refined, focussing on selection for cooperation and sharing, caloric requirements, sexual division of labour, the Expensive Tissue Hypothesis (Aiello & Wheeler 1995), the Social Brain Hypothesis (Aiello & Dunbar 1993; Dunbar 1998), and the long period of development in humans. Humans, including Neanderthals, take 18 to 20 years to grow up, a prolonged growth that arose relatively late in evolution, in interdependence with modern human-like brain size and related to extensive learning processes.

PROGRAM COORDINATION (Wil Roebroeks, PhD and Raymond Corbey, PhD)

Program Director is Wil Roebroeks, PhD, who holds the chair of palaeolithic archaeology at Leiden University. He coordinates the three projects, in particular focusing on the interpretation of archaeological data in terms of the program's research questions and theoretical viewpoints.

Raymond Corbey, PhD is responsible for interdisciplinary and theoretical coordination, with special attention to ethnological and/vs biological views of reciprocity and exchange and recent work on the role of 'embedded' or 'embodied' cognition in human evolution.

AFFILIATED RESEARCH: Upper Palaeolithic humans (Alexander Verpoorte, PhD)

Alexander Verpoorte is conducting his own research on early Upper Palaeolithic societies of west Eurasia in close cooperation with the present program, with an eye on similarities and differences between Middle and Upper Palaeolithic subsistence behaviours, in particular hunting.

CONTACT INFORMATION

POSTAL ADDRESS: Dept. of Archaeology, PO Box 9515, NL 2300 RA Leiden, the Netherlands.

STREET ADDRESS: Dept. of Archaeology, Reuvensplaats 3, Leiden, the Netherlands.

STREET MAP: http://www.leidenuniv.nl/kaart/stad_detail_links-onder.htm

TELEPHONE: +31 (0)71527 -2447 (O.Yates)


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: godsgravesglyphs; hunters; neandertal; neandertals; neanderthal; neanderthals; thoughtful
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1 posted on 01/02/2006 11:59:42 AM PST by blam
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To: SunkenCiv

GGG Ping.


2 posted on 01/02/2006 12:00:18 PM PST by blam
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To: blam
" . . . in contrast to previous opinions . . ."

Of course!

3 posted on 01/02/2006 12:03:34 PM PST by BenLurkin (O beautiful for patriot dream - that sees beyond the years)
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To: blam

What happens when there is only enough work for 5,000 PhDs and you have 25,000 PhDs...


4 posted on 01/02/2006 12:03:57 PM PST by pabianice
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To: blam
Good information. Thanks ===> Placemarker <===
5 posted on 01/02/2006 12:06:07 PM PST by Coyoteman (I love the sound of beta decay in the morning!)
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To: blam
Unlike most animals, which either sit and wait to ambush prey or use stealth and pursuit techniques, human hunters use a wealth of information to make context-specific decisions, both during the search phase of hunting and after prey is encountered. Specifically, information on ecology, seasonality, current weather, expected animal behaviour and fresh animal signs are all integrated to form multivariate mental modules of encounter probabilities that guide the search and are continually updated as conditions change.”

Either this means that, as a hunter, I'm a very evolved individual, or I'm a Neanderthal; I'm not sure which.

6 posted on 01/02/2006 12:11:10 PM PST by Redcloak ("If you can't say something nice about someone, then you must be talking about Hillary Clinton.")
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To: blam

Do you think they really know all this stuff?


7 posted on 01/02/2006 12:16:46 PM PST by nightdriver
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To: blam

How did liberals and vegetarians survive?


8 posted on 01/02/2006 12:21:38 PM PST by miliantnutcase
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To: blam

Neanderthal hunting methods involved hand to hoof combat, and injuries were common. They would wrestle the beast to the ground and beat it with clubs and rocks after running it down or ambushing it. They would summon the women to drag the carcass home and cook it, and then sit around and evaluate their performance such as why so and so was gored, bitten or trampled and how to avoid that next time. The women would also sit around while the beast was cooking and evaluate the performance of the hunters, not necessarily hunting related. There was much joking, some of it not so good-natured, which was the origin of the dramatic form that eventually became formalized as the comedy.


9 posted on 01/02/2006 12:23:10 PM PST by RightWhale (pas de lieu, Rhone que nous)
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To: Redcloak

(Either this means that, as a hunter, I'm a very evolved individual, or I'm a Neanderthal; I'm not sure which)

I think he is trying to say they were very good at killing things. I guess that makes all of us in the Red States Neanderthals. I can live with that!


10 posted on 01/02/2006 12:55:08 PM PST by cpdiii (roughneck (oil field trash and proud of it), geologist, pilot, pharmacist, full time iconoclast)
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To: blam
Ye gods, the prose! The prose! Would it not be a good thing to ritually slaughter one or two of the worst-writing academics each year?
11 posted on 01/02/2006 1:13:46 PM PST by Grut
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To: Grut

(Ye gods, the prose! The prose! Would it not be a good thing to ritually slaughter one or two of the worst-writing academics each year?)

ONLY one or two! How about 5%!


12 posted on 01/02/2006 1:25:10 PM PST by cpdiii (roughneck (oil field trash and proud of it), geologist, pilot, pharmacist, full time iconoclast)
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To: blam
For those, like me, who haven't noticed 'hominin' before:

Hominin definition

or BP:

BP definition

13 posted on 01/02/2006 1:30:48 PM PST by siunevada (If we learn nothing from history, what's the point of having one? - Peggy Hill)
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To: Redcloak

All the deer hunters I know just "sit and wait to ambush prey". The only education needed is for earning enough to pay for the rifles (muzzle loading and centerfire), the compound bow, all-weather heated deer stand and 4-wheeler to ride to the stand and haul out the carcass.


14 posted on 01/02/2006 1:40:56 PM PST by 19th LA Inf
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To: siunevada
On the BP definition--if archaeologists were thinking ahead they would have defined "present" as 2000, rather than 1950.

The math to convert to and from AD/BC would have been a whole lot easier!

[Archaeologists will date any old thing!]

15 posted on 01/02/2006 1:44:55 PM PST by Coyoteman (I love the sound of beta decay in the morning!)
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To: blam
So, in a nutshell, 'primitive' folks just weren't as primitive as they thought...D'oh!

Heck, I'd even go so far as to speculate that as time progressed, Neanderthals developed intellectuals who spent so much time 'talking' about hunting and so little time doing it that they starved...

16 posted on 01/02/2006 1:54:45 PM PST by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly.)
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To: 19th LA Inf

You have to know where to put the stand or none of the rest counts.


17 posted on 01/02/2006 1:56:16 PM PST by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly.)
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To: blam

20 years ago it was thought that the Neanderthal was incapable of vocalization, due to the shape of its bones in the neck and throat area.

I understand that this thinking has changed somewhat.

Do you know where we stand on the question of Neanderthal speech?


18 posted on 01/02/2006 2:27:29 PM PST by edwin hubble
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To: edwin hubble
"Do you know where we stand on the question of Neanderthal speech?"

Neanderthals Gift Of Speech

19 posted on 01/02/2006 2:57:09 PM PST by blam
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To: blam; FairOpinion; Ernest_at_the_Beach; StayAt HomeMother; 24Karet; 3AngelaD; asp1; ...
Thanks Blam.

To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list. Thanks.
Please FREEPMAIL me if you want on or off the
"Gods, Graves, Glyphs" PING list or GGG weekly digest
-- Archaeology/Anthropology/Ancient Cultures/Artifacts/Antiquities, etc.
Gods, Graves, Glyphs (alpha order)

20 posted on 01/02/2006 8:30:09 PM PST by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/pledge)
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