New estimates of tooth mark and percussion mark frequencies at the FLK Zinj site: the carnivore-hominid-carnivore hypothesis falsified.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] Robert J. Blumenschine,et al. A Quantitative Diagnosis of Notches Made by Hammerstone Percussion and Carnivore Gnawing on Bovid Long Bones , 1994, American Antiquity.
[2] M. Domínguez‐Rodrigo. Hunting and Scavenging by Early Humans: The State of the Debate , 2002 .
[3] M. Leakey,et al. Excavations in beds I and II, 1960-1963 , 1971 .
[4] C. K. Brain,et al. New data and ideas on the foraging behaviour of Early Stone Age hominids at Swartkrans Cave, South Africa , 2004 .
[5] H. Piepenbrink. [Examples of signs of biogenic decomposition in bones long buried]. , 1984, Anthropologischer Anzeiger; Bericht uber die biologisch-anthropologische Literatur.
[6] R. Blumenschine. Hominid carnivory and foraging strategies, and the socio-economic function of early archaeological sites. , 1991, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.
[7] R. Blumenschine. Early hominid scavenging opportunities : implications of carcass availability in the Serengeti and Ngorongoro ecosystems , 1986 .
[8] M. Domínguez‐Rodrigo,et al. The use of tooth pits to identify carnivore taxa in tooth-marked archaeofaunas and their relevance to reconstruct hominid carcass processing behaviours , 2003 .
[9] H. Bunn. Meat-eating and human evolution : studies in the diet and subsistence patterns of Plio-Pleistocene hominids in East Africa , 1982 .
[10] L. Binford,et al. Fact and Fiction about the Zinjanthropus Floor: Data, Arguments, and Interpretations , 1988, Current Anthropology.
[11] J. Ezzo,et al. Hunting and Scavenging by Plio-Pleistocene Hominids: Nutritional Constraints, Archaeological Patterns, and Behavioural Implications , 1993 .
[12] J. O'connell,et al. Cut and Tooth Mark Distributions on Large Animal Bones: Ethnoarchaeological Data from the Hadza and Their Implications For Current Ideas About Early Human Carnivory , 2002 .
[13] A. M. Child. Towards and Understanding of the Microbial Decomposition of Archaeological Bone in the Burial Environment , 1995 .
[14] C. K. Brain. The Hunters or the Hunted , 1981 .
[15] C. Hackett. Microscopical Focal Destruction (Tunnels) in Exhumed Human Bones , 1981, Medicine, science, and the law.
[16] C. Marean,et al. Importance of limb bone shaft fragments in zooarchaeology: a response to “On in situ attrition and vertebrate body part profiles” (2002), by M.C. Stiner , 2003 .
[17] M. Domínguez‐Rodrigo,et al. Early hominid hunting and scavenging: A zooarcheological review , 2003 .
[18] L. Naughton-Treves,et al. Risk and opportunity for humans coexisting with large carnivores. , 1999, Journal of human evolution.
[19] Virginia Alcántara García,et al. Determinación de procesos de fractura sobre huesos frescos: un sistema de análisis de los ángulos de los planos de fracturación como discriminador de agentes bióticos , 2006 .
[20] Capaldo. Methods, marks, and models for inferring hominid and carnivore behavior. , 1998, Journal of human evolution.
[21] H. Bunn. A Taphonomic Perspective on the Archaeology of Human Origins , 1991 .
[22] M. Domínguez‐Rodrigo. Bone surface modifications, power scavenging and the "display" model at early archaeological sites: a critical review. , 2003, Journal of human evolution.
[23] C. Marean,et al. Captive hyaena bone choice and destruction, the Schlepp effect and olduvai archaeofaunas , 1992 .
[24] Jean L. Hudson. From bones to behavior : ethnoarchaeological and experimental contributions to the interpretation of faunal remains , 1993 .
[25] Johnna Fisher. Bone surface modifications in zooarchaeology , 1995 .
[26] J. S. Oliver. Estimates of hominid and carnivore involvement in the FLK Zinjanthropus fossil assemblage: some socioecological implications , 1994 .
[27] R. Blumenschine. An experimental model of the timing of hominid and carnivore influence on archaeological bone assemblages , 1988 .
[28] R. Blumenschine. Percussion marks, tooth marks, and experimental determinations of the timing of hominid and carnivore access to long bones at FLK Zinjanthropus, Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania , 1995 .
[29] K. Hawkes,et al. Another reply to Domı́nguez-Rodrigo , 2003 .
[30] K. Nishimura,et al. Direct invasion of bones by highly pathogenic fungi in an in vitro model and its ecological significance. , 2003, Nihon Ishinkin Gakkai zasshi = Japanese journal of medical mycology.
[31] G. Isaac. The food-sharing behavior of protohuman hominids. , 1978, Scientific American.
[32] M. Domínguez‐Rodrigo. Meat-eating by early hominids at the FLK 22 Zinjanthropus site, Olduvai Gorge (Tanzania): an experimental approach using cut-mark data. , 1997, Journal of human evolution.
[33] Henry T. Bunn,et al. Archaeological evidence for meat-eating by Plio-Pleistocene hominids from Koobi Fora and Olduvai Gorge , 1981, Nature.
[34] Anna K. Behrensmeyer,et al. Taphonomic and ecologic information from bone weathering , 1978, Paleobiology.
[35] A. Ascenzi,et al. Fungal osteoclasia: a model of dead bone resorption , 1974, Calcified Tissue Research.
[36] M. Stiner. On in situ attrition and vertebrate body part profiles , 2002 .
[37] R. Klein,et al. Systematic Butchery by Plio/Pleistocene Hominids at Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania [and Comments and Reply] , 1986, Current Anthropology.
[38] Charles P. Egeland,et al. The contribution of limb bone fracture patterns to reconstructing early hominid behaviour at Swartkrans cave (South Africa): archaeological application of a new analytical method , 2005 .
[39] S. Capaldo,et al. Experimental determinations of carcass processing by Plio-Pleistocene hominids and carnivores at FLK 22 (Zinjanthropus). Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania. , 1997, Journal of human evolution.
[40] F. Marshall,et al. Meat Eating, Hominid Sociality, and Home Bases Revisited , 1996, Current Anthropology.
[41] J. Wilder,et al. Identifying the Involvement of Multiple Carnivore Taxa with Archaeological Bone Assemblages , 2001 .
[42] R. Blumenschine,et al. Percussion marks on bone surfaces as a new diagnostic of hominid behaviour , 1988, Nature.
[43] S. Capaldo. Inferring hominid and carnivore behavior from dual-patterned archaeofaunal assemblages , 1996 .
[44] L. Binford. Bones: Ancient Men and Modern Myths , 1981 .