Evolution in Archaeology

This review begins with a brief outline of the key concepts of Darwinian archaeology. Its history is then summarized, beginning with its emergence as a significant theoretical focus within the discipline in the early 1980s; its main present-day currents are then presented, citing examples of recent work. The developments in archaeology are part of broader trends in anthropology and psychology and are characterized by the same theoretical disagreements. There are two distinct research traditions: one centered on cultural transmission and dual inheritance theory and the other on human behavioral ecology. The development of specifically archaeological methodologies within these two traditions for testing evolutionary hypotheses relating to diachronic questions using archaeological data is discussed. Finally, this review suggests that the greatest challenge for the future lies in finding ways of using archaeological data to address current major debates in evolutionary social science as a whole concerning, for example, the emergence of largescale cooperation.

[1]  Alice B. Kehoe Archaeology and Language: The Puzzle of Indo-European Origins , 1989, American Antiquity.

[2]  Eric Alden Smith,et al.  Human Territoriality: An Ecological Reassessment , 1978 .

[3]  D. Washburn Remembering Things Seen: Experimental Approaches to the Process of Information Transmittal , 2001 .

[4]  F. Neiman Stylistic Variation in Evolutionary Perspective: Inferences from Decorative Diversity and Interassemblage Distance in Illinois Woodland Ceramic Assemblages , 1995, American Antiquity.

[5]  B. Winterhalder,et al.  1. Behavioral Ecology and the Transition from Hunting and Gathering to Agriculture , 2006, Behavioral Ecology and the Transition to Agriculture.

[6]  M. Pagel,et al.  THE COMPARATIVE METHOD IN ANTHROPOLOGY , 1994 .

[7]  B. Skyrms Evolution of the social contract , 1996 .

[8]  Carl P. Lipo,et al.  Cultural Transmission Theory and the Archaeological Record: Providing Context to Understanding Variation and Temporal Changes in Material Culture , 2007 .

[9]  Dwight W. Read,et al.  Population Growth, Carrying Capacity, and Conflict1 , 2003, Current Anthropology.

[10]  Robert L. Bettinger,et al.  Point Typologies, Cultural Transmission, and the Spread of Bow-and-Arrow Technology in the Prehistoric Great Basin , 1999, American Antiquity.

[11]  Bruce Winterhalder,et al.  12. The Ideal Free Distribution, Food Production, and the Colonization of Oceania , 2006, Behavioral Ecology and the Transition to Agriculture.

[12]  Sandra L. Vehrencamp,et al.  A model for the evolution of despotic versus egalitarian societies , 1983, Animal Behaviour.

[13]  D. Sperber,et al.  Explaining Culture: A Naturalistic Approach , 1998 .

[14]  K. Summers The evolutionary ecology of despotism , 2005 .

[15]  Robert C. Dunnell,et al.  Style and Function: A Fundamental Dichotomy , 1978, American Antiquity.

[16]  W. Sutherland From Individual Behaviour to Population Ecology , 1996 .

[17]  K. Laland,et al.  Towards a unified science of cultural evolution. , 2006, The Behavioral and brain sciences.

[18]  Keith F. Otterbein,et al.  The Comparative Method in Anthropology [and Comments and Reply] , 1994, Current Anthropology.

[19]  S. Shennan,et al.  Ceramic Style Change and Neutral Evolution: A Case Study from Neolithic Europe , 2001, American Antiquity.

[20]  S. Fretwell,et al.  On territorial behavior and other factors influencing habitat distribution in birds , 1969 .

[21]  R. Foley,et al.  Mode 3 Technologies and the Evolution of Modern Humans , 1997, Cambridge Archaeological Journal.

[22]  D. Kennett The Island Chumash: Behavioral Ecology of a Maritime Society , 2005 .

[23]  B. Fitzhugh The evolution of complex hunter-gatherers : archaeological evidence from the North Pacific , 2003 .

[24]  Ingo Wegener,et al.  Complexity Theory , 2005 .

[25]  R. A. Bentley,et al.  Handbook of archaeological theories , 2007 .

[26]  V. Butler Resource Depression on the Northwest Coast of North America , 2000 .

[27]  D. North Structure and Change in Economic History , 1983 .

[28]  Stephen Shennan,et al.  The spread of Neolithic plant economies from the Near East to northwest Europe: a phylogenetic analysis , 2008 .

[29]  Richard McElreath,et al.  Cultural transmission, phylogenetics, and the archaeological record , 2006 .

[30]  K. Lupo Evolutionary Foraging Models in Zooarchaeological Analysis: Recent Applications and Future Challenges , 2007 .

[31]  Simon J. Greenhill,et al.  The Pleasures and Perils of Darwinizing Culture (with Phylogenies) , 2007 .

[32]  Bruce Winterhalder,et al.  Behavioral Ecology and the Transition to Agriculture , 2006 .

[33]  E. Smith,et al.  Is It Evolution Yet? A Critique of Evolutionary Archaeology1 , 1998, Current Anthropology.

[34]  Richard C Lewontin,et al.  THE PRICE OF METAPHOR , 2005 .

[35]  D. Dennett,et al.  Darwinizing culture : the status of memetics as a science , 2001 .

[36]  B. Codding,et al.  Man the Showoff? Or the Ascendance of a Just-so-Story: A Comment on Recent Applications of Costly Signaling Theory in American Archaeology , 2007, American Antiquity.

[37]  P. Velde Bandkeramik social inequality - a case study , 1990 .

[38]  Peter Bellwood EARLY AGRICULTURALIST POPULATION DIASPORAS ?F ARMING ,L ANGUAGES, AND GENES , 2001 .

[39]  Lisa Nagaoka Explaining subsistence change in southern New Zealand using foraging theory models , 2002 .

[40]  Bruce Winterhalder,et al.  A simple model of technological intensification , 2006 .

[41]  Monique Borgerhoff Mulder,et al.  Comparative Methods for Studying Cultural Trait Evolution: A Simulation Study , 2006 .

[42]  Russell D. Gray,et al.  Language trees support the express-train sequence of Austronesian expansion , 2000, Nature.

[43]  Duncan Metcalfe,et al.  A Model for Exploring the Optimal Trade‐off between Field Processing and Transport , 1992 .

[44]  Jason Bright,et al.  When is technology worth the trouble , 2003 .

[45]  Patrick V. Kirch,et al.  Hawaiki, Ancestral Polynesia: An Essay in Historical Anthropology , 2001 .

[46]  M. Feldman,et al.  Cultural transmission and evolution: a quantitative approach. , 1981, Monographs in population biology.

[47]  Mark George Thomas,et al.  Absence of the lactase-persistence-associated allele in early Neolithic Europeans , 2007, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

[48]  J. Chatters,et al.  Cultural Diversification and Decimation in the Prehistoric Record1 , 2003, Current Anthropology.

[49]  D. Bamforth Evidence and Metaphor in Evolutionary Archaeology , 2002, American Antiquity.

[50]  R. Lewontin,et al.  Does Culture Evolve , 1999 .

[51]  C. Renfrew,et al.  Archaeology and Language: The Puzzle of Indo-European Origins , 1988, American Antiquity.

[52]  Carl P. Lipo,et al.  Cultural transmission, copying errors, and the generation of variation in material culture and the archaeological record , 2005 .

[53]  J. Broughton,et al.  Holocene Environmental Change, Artiodactyl Abundances, and Human Hunting Strategies in the Great Basin , 2004, American Antiquity.

[54]  Timothy A. Kohler,et al.  Vessels and villages: evidence for conformist transmission in early village aggregations on the Pajarito Plateau, New Mexico , 2004 .

[55]  Stephen Shennan,et al.  The spread of farming into Central Europe and its consequences: evolutionary models , 2007 .

[56]  R. BliegeBird,et al.  Signaling Theory, Strategic Interaction, and Symbolic Capital1 , 2005, Current Anthropology.

[57]  M. Mannino,et al.  Depletion of a resource? The impact of prehistoric human foraging on intertidal mollusc communities and its significance for human settlement, mobility and dispersal , 2002 .

[58]  K. Hawkes,et al.  Showing off: Tests of an hypothesis about men's foraging goals , 1991 .

[59]  F. Neiman Conspicuous Consumption as Wasteful Advertising: a Darwinian Perspective on Spatial Patterns in Classic Maya Terminal Monument Dates , 2008 .

[60]  K. Barlow Predicting Maize Agriculture among the Fremont: An Economic Comparison of Farming and Foraging in the American Southwest , 2002, American Antiquity.

[61]  Terry L. Hunt,et al.  Human Diversity and the Myth of the Primitive Isolate , 1997, Current Anthropology.

[62]  A. Ugan Does Size Matter? Body Size, Mass Collecting, and Their Implications for Understanding Prehistoric Foraging Behavior , 2005, American Antiquity.

[63]  Michael J. O'Brien,et al.  Cladistics and archaeology , 2003 .

[64]  K. McGuire,et al.  Costly Signaling and the Ascendance of No-Can-Do Archaeology: A Reply to Codding and Jones , 2007, American Antiquity.

[65]  J. O'connell,et al.  Behavioral Ecology and Archaeology , 2006 .

[66]  R. Dunnell Evolutionary Theory and Archaeology , 1980 .

[67]  N. D. Pidgen,et al.  The Comparative Method , 1987 .

[68]  N. Eldredge,et al.  Phylogenetics and Material Cultural Evolution , 2007, Current Anthropology.

[69]  M. Ghiselin,et al.  Coevolution: Genes, Culture, and Human Diversity , 1991, Politics and the Life Sciences.

[70]  K. McGuire,et al.  The Ascendance of Hunting during the California Middle Archaic: An Evolutionary Perspective , 2002, American Antiquity.

[71]  F Riede,et al.  Tangled Trees: Modelling Material Culture Evolution as Host-Associate Co-Speciation , 2009 .

[72]  K. McGuire,et al.  Re-Thinking Great Basin Foragers: Prestige Hunting and Costly Signaling during the Middle Archaic Period , 2005, American Antiquity.

[73]  Stephen J Shennan,et al.  Random drift and culture change , 2004, Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences.

[74]  Michael J. O'Brien,et al.  The Goals of Evolutionary Archaeology , 1998, Current Anthropology.

[75]  Carl P. Lipo,et al.  Mapping our ancestors : phylogenetic approaches in anthropology and prehistory , 2006 .

[76]  J. Broughton Declines in Mammalian Foraging Efficiency during the Late Holocene, San Francisco Bay, California , 1994 .

[77]  R. Gray,et al.  Untangling our past : languages, trees, splits and networks , 2005 .

[78]  J. Henrich Cultural group selection, coevolutionary processes and large-scale cooperation , 2004 .

[79]  R. Mace The coevolution of human fertility and wealth inheritance strategies. , 1998, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences.

[80]  Mark Collard,et al.  Evolutionary Biological Methods and Cultural Data , 2008 .

[81]  R. Gray,et al.  Language-tree divergence times support the Anatolian theory of Indo-European origin , 2003, Nature.

[82]  T. Price,et al.  Prehistoric Migration in Europe: Strontium Isotope Analysis of Early Neolithic Skeletons , 2002 .

[83]  S. Gaulin Adaptation and human behavior: An anthropological perspective. Edited by Lee Cronk, Napoleon Chagnon and William Irons, New York; Aldine de Gruyter, 2000, xv+512 pages, ISBN 0-202-02043-6. , 2001 .

[84]  J. Broughton Widening diet breadth, declining foraging efficiency, and prehistoric harvest pressure: ichthyofaunal evidence from the Emeryville Shellmound, California , 1997, Antiquity.

[85]  Samuel Bowles,et al.  Supporting Online Material Materials and Methods Som Text Figs. S1 and S2 Table S1 References and Notes the Coevolution of Parochial Altruism and War , 2022 .

[86]  Monique Borgerhoff Mulder,et al.  Using phylogenetically based comparative methods in anthropology: More questions than answers , 2001 .

[87]  Todd A. Surovell,et al.  The Tortoise and the Hare , 2000, Current Anthropology.

[88]  M. Rosenberg Pattern, process, and hierarchy in the evolution of culture , 1994 .

[89]  M. Stiner,et al.  Approaches to Prehistoric Diet Breadth, Demography, and Prey Ranking Systems in Time and Space , 2002 .