The Archaeology of Aquatic Adaptations: Paradigms for a New Millennium

Although aquatic resources are often seen as central to the development of post-Pleistocene cultural complexity, most models of human evolution have all but ignored the role of aquatic or maritime adaptations during the earlier stages of human history. When did aquatic resources, maritime adaptations, and seafaring first play a significant role in human evolution? I explore this fundamental question by (1) reviewing various theories on the subject; (2) discussing a variety of problems that prevent archaeologists from providing a clear answer; and (3) examining the archaeological record for evidence of early aquatic resource use or seafaring. I conclude that aquatic resources, wherever they were both abundant and relatively accessible, have probably always been used opportunistically by our ancestors. Evidence suggests, however, that aquatic and maritime adaptations (including seafaring) played a significantly greater role in the demographic and geographic expansion of anatomically modern humans after about 150,000 years ago. Another significant expansion occurred somewhat later in time, with the development of more sophisticated seafaring, fishing, and marine hunting technologies.

[1]  T. Jones Marine-Resource Value and the Priority of Coastal Settlement: A California Perspective , 1991, American Antiquity.

[2]  Joseph B. Birdsell,et al.  Some Environmental and Cultural Factors Influencing the Structuring of Australian Aboriginal Populations , 1953, The American Naturalist.

[3]  G. Momber Drowned and deserted: a submerged prehistoric landscape in the Solent, England , 2000 .

[4]  L. Straus Man and Sea in the Mesolithic: Coastal Settlement above and below Present Sea Level , 1997 .

[5]  Jim Allen,et al.  Human Pleistocene adaptations in the tropical island Pacific: recent evidence from New Ireland, a Greater Australian outlier , 1989, Antiquity.

[6]  J. Janetski,et al.  Hidden Dimensions: The Cultural Significance of Wetland Archaeology , 2002 .

[7]  S. Kuhn,et al.  Reports The Earliest Aurignacian of Riparo Mochi (Liguria, Italy)1 , 1998, Current Anthropology.

[8]  R. Macneish Early Man in The Andes , 1971 .

[9]  L. Binford Faunal remains from Klasies River mouth , 1984 .

[10]  D. Yesner Human Adaptation at the Pleistocene—Holocene Boundary (circa 13,000 to 8,000 bp) in Eastern Beringia , 1996 .

[11]  W. Noble,et al.  Why the first colonisation of the Australian region is the earliest evidence of modern human behaviour , 1992 .

[12]  S. Washburn,et al.  The Evolution of Hunting , 1968 .

[13]  C. Denys,et al.  Cut marks on small mammals at Olduvai Gorge Bed-I. , 1999, Journal of Human Evolution.

[14]  J. Ewing Preliminary Note on the Excavations at the Palaeolithic Site of Ksâr 'Akil, Republic of Lebanon , 1947, Antiquity.

[15]  M. Moss Shellfish, Gender, and Status on the Northwest Coast: Reconciling Archeological, Ethnographic, and Ethnohistorical Records of the Tlingit , 1993 .

[16]  J. Vogel,et al.  FOCUS: Luminescence Dating of Coastal Sands: Overcoming Changes in Environmental Dose Rate , 1999 .

[17]  E. Bigalke The exploitation of shell fish by coastal tribesmen of the Transkei , 1973 .

[18]  Nasruddin,et al.  Archaeological and palaeontological research in central Flores, east Indonesia: results of fieldwork 1997–98 , 1999, Antiquity.

[19]  M. Faught,et al.  EARLY HUMAN OCCUPATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE IN NORTHWESTERN FLORIDA , 1998 .

[20]  V. Butler,et al.  The role of bone density in structuring prehistoric salmon bone assemblages , 1994 .

[21]  B. Fagan,et al.  In the Beginning: An Introduction to Archaeology , 1972 .

[22]  W. Hildebrandt,et al.  Evolution of marine mammal hunting: A view from the California and Oregon coasts , 1992 .

[23]  J. Chappell,et al.  A 40,000 year-old human occupation site at Huon Peninsula, Papua New Guinea , 1986, Nature.

[24]  M. Moss Archaeology and cultural ecology of the prehistoric Angoon Tlingit , 1989 .

[25]  David B. Madsen,et al.  Mass collecting and the diet breadth model: A Great Basin example , 1998 .

[26]  E. Dixon Bones, Boats, and Bison: Archeology and the First Colonization of Western North America , 1999 .

[27]  M. Spriggs,et al.  Pleistocene human occupation of the Solomon Islands, Melanesia , 1988, Antiquity.

[28]  Agustín Llagostera Early Occupations and the Emergence of Fishermen on the Pacific Coast of South America , 1992 .

[29]  Jennifer R. Richman,et al.  On Mussels: Mytilus Californianus as a Prehistoric Resource , 1995 .

[30]  The Food Crisis in Prehistory: Overpopulation and the Origins of Agriculture , 1978 .

[31]  J. Erlandson,et al.  Reflections on North American Pacific Coast prehistory , 1995 .

[32]  J. Flood Archaeology of the dreamtime , 1983 .

[33]  F. P. Shepard Sea Level Changes in the Past 6000 Years: Possible Archeological Significance , 1964, Science.

[34]  A. Osborn Aboriginal Exploitation of Marine Food Resources , 1977 .

[35]  J. Erlandson,et al.  Early Holocene Adaptations on the Southern Northwest Coast , 1998 .

[36]  Rhys Jones,et al.  Thermoluminescence dating of a 50,000-year-old human occupation site in northern Australia , 1990, Nature.

[37]  L. Straus Humans at the end of the Ice Age : the archaeology of the Pleistocene-Holocene transition , 1997 .

[38]  G. R. Scott,et al.  The Anthropology of Modern Human Teeth: Dental Morphology and its Variation in Recent Human Populations , 1997 .

[39]  D. Yesner,et al.  Maritime Hunter-Gatherers: Ecology and Prehistory [and Comments and Reply] , 1980, Current Anthropology.

[40]  M. Tveskov The Coos and Coquille : a northwest coast historical anthropology , 2000 .

[41]  W. Buchanan Shellfish in prehistoric diet : Elands Bay, S.W. Cape Coast, South Africa , 1988 .

[42]  C. Stringer Palaeoanthropology: Coasting out of Africa , 2000, Nature.

[43]  A. Kersten Birds from the Palaeolithic Rock Shelter of Ksar 'Akil, Lebanon , 1991 .

[44]  K. Stothert The Preceramic Las Vegas Culture of Coastal Ecuador , 1985, American Antiquity.

[45]  C. Borden Peopling and early cultures of the pacific northwest. , 1979, Science.

[46]  J. Erlandson,et al.  Early Holocene Fishing Strategies on the California Coast: Evidence from CA-SBA-2057 , 2000 .

[47]  R. Duffy,et al.  Fine mesh screening of midden material and the recovery of fish bone: The development of flotation and deflocculation techniques for an efficient and effective procedure , 2000 .

[48]  P. Veth The Aboriginal occupation of the Montebello Islands, Northwest Australia , 1993 .

[49]  H. Lumley A Paleolithic Camp at Nice , 1969 .

[50]  Rhys Jones,et al.  Pleistocene dates for the human occupation of New Ireland, northern Melanesia , 1988, Nature.

[51]  W. Limp,et al.  An Economic Evaluation of the Potential of Fish Utilization in Riverine Environments , 1979, American Antiquity.

[52]  M. Leavesley,et al.  Dates, disturbance and artefact distributions: another analysis of Buang Merabak, a Pleistocene site on New Ireland, Papua New Guinea , 1998 .

[53]  D. Kennett,et al.  Competitive and Cooperative Responses to Climatic Instability in Coastal Southern California , 2000, American Antiquity.

[54]  R. Bednarik,et al.  Nale Tasih 2: journey of a Middle Palaeolithic raft , 1999 .

[55]  D. Fedje,et al.  Modeling Paleoshorelines and Locating Early Holocene Coastal Sites in Haida Gwaii , 1999, American Antiquity.

[56]  K. Stewart Early hominid utilisation of fish resources and implications for seasonality and behaviour , 1994 .

[57]  J. Erlandson The Role of Shellfish in Prehistoric Economies: A Protein Perspective , 1988, American Antiquity.

[58]  N. Jablonski,et al.  The origin of hominid bipedalism re‐examined , 1992 .

[59]  T. Fenton,et al.  The Buhl Burial: A Paleoindian Woman from Southern Idaho , 1998, American Antiquity.

[60]  A. C. Goodyear The Chronological Position of the Dalton Horizon in the Southeastern United States , 1982, American Antiquity.

[61]  Judith F. Porcasi,et al.  The Dolphin Hunters: A Specialized Prehistoric Maritime Adaptation in the Southern California Channel Islands and Baja California , 2000, American Antiquity.

[62]  Michael Grüninger,et al.  Introduction , 2002, CACM.

[63]  R. Bird,et al.  Contemporary Shellfish Gathering Strategies among the Meriam of the Torres Strait Islands, Australia: Testing Predictions of a Central Place Foraging Model , 1997 .

[64]  B. Chernoff,et al.  Paleoindian Cave Dwellers in the Amazon: The Peopling of the Americas , 1996, Science.

[65]  Gregory A. Waselkov,et al.  Shellfish Gathering and Shell Midden Archaeology , 1987 .

[66]  R. Klein The human career : human biological and cultural origins , 1991 .

[67]  J. Quilter,et al.  Subsistence Economies and the Origins of Andean Complex Societies , 1983 .

[68]  C. Henshilwood,et al.  Bone Artefacts from the Middle Stone Age at Blombos Cave, Southern Cape, South Africa1 , 1997, Current Anthropology.

[69]  M. Tappen,et al.  Archaeology of the Lusso Beds , 1990 .

[70]  Betty Francis Meehan,et al.  Shell bed to shell midden , 1982 .

[71]  D. Fedje,et al.  Early holocene archaelogy and paleoecology at the Arrow Creek sites in Gwaii Haanas , 1996 .

[72]  Max Uhle The Emeryville Shellmound , 1907 .

[73]  G. Avery,et al.  Protein Poisoning and Coastal Subsistence , 1988 .

[74]  J. Townsend Ranked Societies of the Alaskan Pacific Rim , 1980 .

[75]  M. Glassow,et al.  Coastal Adaptations near Point Conception, California, with Particular Regard to Shellfish Exploitation , 1988, American Antiquity.

[76]  W. Klippel,et al.  Freshwater Mussels as a Prehistoric Food Resource , 1974, American Antiquity.

[77]  Michael A. Glassow Purisimeno Chumash Prehistory: Maritime Adaptations Along the Southern California Coast , 1995 .

[78]  N. Flemming Archaeological evidence for vertical movement on the continental shelf during the Palaeolithic, Neolithic and Bronze Age periods , 1999, Geological Society, London, Special Publications.

[79]  W. Auffenberg The Fossil Turtles of Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania, Africa , 1981 .

[80]  W. Hildebrandt,et al.  Reasserting a Prehistoric Tragedy of the Commons: Reply to Lyman , 1995 .

[81]  J. Erlandson,et al.  Paleocoastal Marine Fishing on the Pacific Coast of the Americas: Perspectives from Daisy Cave, California , 2001, American Antiquity.

[82]  A. Garson Comment upon the Economic Potential of Fish Utilization in Riverine Environments and Potential Archaeological Biases , 1980, American Antiquity.

[83]  E. Werker,et al.  The oldest ever brush hut plant remains from Ohalo II, Jordan Valley, Israel (19,000 BP) , 1999, Antiquity.

[84]  William W. Fitzhugh,et al.  A Comparative Approach to Northern Maritime Adaptations , 1975 .

[85]  J. Clark The Development of Fishing in Prehistoric Europe , 1948, The Antiquaries Journal.

[86]  T. Akazawa,et al.  The Pleistocene—Holocene Transition in Japan and Adjacent Northeast Asia , 1996 .

[87]  J. N. Smith,et al.  Dating and context of three middle stone age sites with bone points in the Upper Semliki Valley, Zaire. , 1995, Science.

[88]  R. Minor,et al.  Earthquake-Induced Subsidence and Burial of Late Holocene Archaeological Sites, Northern Oregon Coast , 1996, American Antiquity.

[89]  M. Stright Archaeological sites on the North American continental shelf , 1990 .

[90]  M. Glassow Weighing vs. Counting Shellfish Remains: A Comment on Mason, Peterson, and Tiffany , 2000, American Antiquity.

[91]  M. Faught Clovis origins and underwater prehistoric archaeology in northwestern Florida , 1996 .

[92]  C. Mcburney A Key Site on the Mediterranean. (Book Reviews: The Haua Fteah (Cyrenaica) and the Stone Age of the South-East Mediterranean) , 1967 .

[93]  C. Claassen Quantifying Shell: Comments on Mason, Peterson, and Tiffany , 2000, American Antiquity.

[94]  Rhys Jones,et al.  Caveat Excavator: A Sea Bird Midden on Steep Head Island, North West Tasmania , 1978 .

[95]  V. Childe,et al.  The Mesolithic Settlement of Northern Europe: , 1936, Nature.

[96]  Richardson,et al.  Early maritime economy and El Nino events at quebrada tacahuay, peru , 1998, Science.

[97]  Stephen M. Perlman,et al.  An Optimum Diet Model, Coastal Variability, and Hunter–Gatherer Behavior , 1980 .

[98]  B. Fagan The journey from Eden : the peopling of our world , 1990 .

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

[100]  Rhys Jones,et al.  Pleistocene human remains from Australia: a living site and human cremation from Lake Mungo, Western New South Wales. , 1970, World archaeology.

[101]  G. Clark,et al.  Ice-Age Subsistence in Northern Spain , 1980 .

[102]  R. Klein,et al.  Middle Stone Age stratigraphy and excavations at Die Kelders Cave 1 (Western Cape Province, South Africa): the 1992, 1993, and 1995 field seasons. , 2000, Journal of human evolution.

[103]  Richard B. Klein,et al.  The human career , 1989 .

[104]  T. H. Andel Late Pleistocene Sea Levels and the Human Exploitation of the Shore and Shelf of Southern South Africa , 1989 .

[105]  A. Jerardino Excavations at Pancho's Kitchen Midden, Western Cape Coast, South Africa: Further Observations into the Megamidden Period , 1998 .

[106]  M. Tveskov Maritime Settlement and Subsistence along the Southern New England Coast: Evidence from Block Island, Rhode Island , 1998 .

[107]  J. Erlandson,et al.  The Systematic Use of Radiocarbon Dating in Archaeological Surveys in Coastal and Other Erosional Environments , 1999, American Antiquity.

[108]  Sidwell Vd Chemical and nutritional composition of finfishes, whales, crustaceans, mollusks, and their products , 1981 .

[109]  S. Bowdler The silver dollar site, Shark Bay: An interim report , 1990 .

[110]  M. Stiner Honor among thieves : a zooarchaeological study of Neandertal ecology , 1994 .

[111]  M. Stoneking,et al.  Neandertal DNA Sequences and the Origin of Modern Humans , 1997, Cell.

[112]  C. Gamble The Palaeolithic Settlement of Europe , 1987 .

[113]  T. Dillehay,et al.  Monte Verde: A Late Pleistocene Settlement in Chile. , 1991 .

[114]  R. Klein,et al.  Duinefontein 2: an Acheulean site in the Western Cape Province of South Africa. , 1999, Journal of human evolution.

[115]  J. Southon,et al.  Early Humans and Rapidly Changing Holocene Sea Levels in the Queen Charlotte Islands-Hecate Strait, British Columbia, Canada , 1997 .

[116]  Glascock,et al.  Quebrada jaguay: early south american maritime adaptations , 1998, Science.

[117]  R. Klein,et al.  Re-analysis of faunal assemblages from the Haua Fteah and other late quaternary archaeological sites in Cyrenaican Libya , 1986 .

[118]  R. Klein,et al.  Exploitation of large bovids and seals at Middle and Later Stone Age sites in South Africa , 1996 .

[119]  R. Lyman On the Evolution of Marine Mammal Hunting on the West Coast of North America , 1995 .

[120]  R. Klein Why Anatomically Modern People Did Not Disperse from Africa 100,000 Years Ago , 2002 .

[121]  Susan Cachel,et al.  The human career: Human biological and cultural origins , 2000 .

[122]  D. Jorgensen Ethnography Under the Volcano , 1998, Current Anthropology.

[123]  M. Leakey,et al.  Excavations in beds III, IV, and the Masek beds, 1968-1971 , 1996 .

[124]  J. Waechter Excavations at Gorham's Cave, Gibraltar , 1951, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.

[125]  G. Souville Atlas préhistorique du Maroc, 1. Le Maroc atlantique , 1973 .

[126]  M. Morwood,et al.  Fission-track ages of stone tools and fossils on the east Indonesian island of Flores , 1998, Nature.

[127]  A. Cannon Settlement and Sea-Levels on the Central Coast of British Columbia: Evidence from Shell Midden Cores , 2000, American Antiquity.

[128]  J. Clark Seal-Hunting in the Stone Age of North-Western Europe: A Study in Economic Prehistory , 1946, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.

[129]  F. Aziz,et al.  Middle Pleistocene faunal turnover and colonization of Flores (Indonesia) by Homo erectus , 1994 .

[130]  M. Stiner Palaeolithic mollusc exploitation at Riparo Mochi (Balzi Rossi, Italy): food and ornaments from the Aurignacian through Epigravettian , 1999, Antiquity.

[131]  D. A. E. Garrod,et al.  Excavation of a Mousterian rock-shelter at Devil's Tower, Gibraltar , 1928 .

[132]  H. Deacon,et al.  Burrill Lake and Currarong , 1972 .

[133]  P. Goldberg Micromorphology and site formation at Die Kelders Cave I, South Africa. , 2000, Journal of human evolution.

[134]  K. Lightfoot Long-term developments in complex hunter-gatherer societies: Recent perspectives from the pacific coast of North America , 1993 .

[135]  S. O’Connor New radiocarbon dates from Koolan Island, West Kimberley, WA , 1989 .

[136]  Jeanne E. Arnold,et al.  Contexts of Cultural Change in Insular California , 1997, American Antiquity.

[137]  W. Engelbrecht,et al.  Paleoindian Watercraft: Evidence and Implications , 1995 .

[138]  David J. Wilson,et al.  Of Maize and Men: A Critique of the Maritime Hypothesis of State Origins on the Coast of Peru , 1981 .

[139]  V. Butler Tui Chub Taphonomy and the Importance of Marsh Resources in the Western Great Basin of North America , 1996, American Antiquity.

[140]  J. Erlandson,et al.  Evidence for Temporal Fluctuations in Marine Radiocarbon Reservoir Ages in the Santa Barbara Channel, Southern California , 1997 .

[141]  J. Yellen,et al.  A middle stone age worked bone industry from Katanda, Upper Semliki Valley, Zaire. , 1995, Science.

[142]  C. M. Barton,et al.  The Upper Paleolithic in Mediterranean Spain: A Review of Current Evidence , 1998 .

[143]  O. Bar‐Yosef The lower paleolithic of the Near East , 1994 .

[144]  R. Klein Anatomy, behavior, and modern human origins , 1995 .

[145]  K. Ames,et al.  Peoples of the Northwest Coast: Their Archaeology and Prehistory , 1999 .

[146]  J. Erlandson,et al.  The Pleistocene—Holocene Transition along the Pacific Coast of North America , 1996 .

[147]  M. Cohen Pacific Coast Foragers : Affluent or Overcrowded? , 1981 .

[148]  J. Raymond,et al.  The Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization: A Reconsideration of the Evidence , 1981, American Antiquity.

[149]  M. Zárate,et al.  THE PLEISTOCENE–HOLOCENE TRANSITION AND HUMAN OCCUPATIONS IN THE SOUTHERN CONE OF SOUTH AMERICA , 1998 .

[150]  J. Erlandson,et al.  Early Hunter-Gatherers of the California Coast , 1994 .

[151]  R. Klein,et al.  Human Beginnings in South Africa: Uncovering the Secrets of the Stone Age , 1999 .

[152]  J. Broughton Resource Depression and Intensification During the Late Holocene, San Francisco Bay: Evidence from the Emeryville Shellmound Vertebrate Fauna , 1999 .

[153]  R. Klein,et al.  Paleoenvironmental and Human Behavioral Implications of the Boegoeberg 1 Late Pleistocene Hyena Den, Northern Cape Province, South Africa , 1999, Quaternary Research.

[154]  R. Lewis Sea-Level Rise and Subsidence Effects on Gulf Coast Archaeological Site Distributions , 2000, American Antiquity.

[155]  R. Edwards,et al.  Early human occupation of the Red Sea coast of Eritrea during the last interglacial , 2000, Nature.

[156]  J. Yellen Barbed Bone Points: Tradition and Continuity in Saharan and Sub-Saharan Africa , 1998 .

[157]  C. Gamble Timewalkers: The Prehistory of Global Colonization , 1993 .

[158]  A. Smith,et al.  The invisible whale , 1984 .

[159]  C. O. V. Regteren Molluscs and Echinoderms from Palaeolithic deposits in the Rock Shelter of Ksâr'akil, Lebanon , 1962 .

[160]  R. Unger,et al.  Archaeology of the boat , 1976 .

[161]  T. P. Volman,et al.  Early Archeological Evidence for Shellfish Collecting , 1978, Science.

[162]  Lewis H.Hg Morgan,et al.  Ancient society : researches in the lines of human progress from savagery through barbarism to civilization , 2022 .

[163]  R. G. Matson,et al.  The Prehistory of the Northwest Coast , 1994 .

[164]  V. Butler Natural Versus Cultural Salmonid Remains: Origin of The Dalles Roadcut Bones, Columbia River, Oregon, U.S.A. , 1993 .

[165]  K. Emery,et al.  Archaeological Potential of the Atlantic Continental Shelf , 1966, American Antiquity.

[166]  Brian M. Fagan,et al.  Archaeology: Theories, Methods, and Practice , 1992 .

[167]  Sylvia A. Earle,et al.  Sea Change: A Message of the Oceans , 1995 .

[168]  Jean-Jacques Cleyet-Merle,et al.  La prehistoire de la peche , 1990 .

[169]  J. Erlandson,et al.  Shellfish Feeders, Carrion Eaters, and the Archaeology of Aquatic Adaptations , 2001, American Antiquity.

[170]  A. McCartney Maritime Adaptations in Cold Archipelagoes: An Analysis of Environment and Culture In the Aleutian and Other Island Chains , 1973 .

[171]  L. Mark Raab,et al.  Medieval Climatic Anomaly and Punctuated Cultural Evolution in Coastal Southern California , 1997, American Antiquity.

[172]  P. Beaumont,et al.  The Middle Stone Age at Klasies River Mouth in South Africa , 1982 .

[173]  Curtis N. Runnels,et al.  Coastal Paleogeography of the Central and Western Mediterranean during the Last 125,000 Years and Its Archaeological Implications , 1984 .

[174]  A. Martinez,et al.  9,700 Years of Maritime Subsistence on the Pacific: An Analysis by Means of Bioindicators in the North of Chile , 1979, American Antiquity.

[175]  J. Cherry The First colonization of the Meditterranean Islands: A Review of Recent Research , 1990 .

[176]  T. V. Andel,et al.  Prehistoric shell assemblages from Franchthi Cave and evolution of the adjacent coastal zone , 1980, Nature.

[177]  S. H. Andersen Tybrind Vig: A Preliminary Report on a Submerged Ertebølle Settlement on the West Coast of Fyn , 1985 .

[178]  R. L. Kelly The Foraging Spectrum: Diversity in Hunter-Gatherer Lifeways , 1997 .

[179]  P. Villa Terra Amata and the Middle Pleistocene Archaeological Record of Southern France , 1983 .

[180]  Michael E. Moseley,et al.  The maritime foundations of Andean civilization , 1975 .

[181]  P. Bleed,et al.  Prehistory of Japan. , 1983 .

[182]  J. Erlandson,et al.  Early Holocene Basketry and Cordage from Daisy Cave San Miguel Island, California , 1995, American Antiquity.

[183]  A. Debénath,et al.  Découverte de deux nouveaux gisements préhistoriques près de Rabat (Maroc) , 1979 .

[184]  Mark Nathan Cohen,et al.  Research and Development in the Stone Age: Technological Transitions among Hunter-Gatherers [and Comments and Reply] , 1981, Current Anthropology.

[185]  Paul Johnstone,et al.  The sea-craft of prehistory , 1980 .

[186]  J. Wymer,et al.  The Lower Paleolithic Site at Hoxne, England , 1993 .

[187]  J. Erlandson,et al.  An Archaeological and Paleontological Chronology for Daisy Cave (CA-SMI-261), San Miguel Island, California , 1996, Radiocarbon.

[188]  Jerry D. Moore Behavioral Ecology and Hunter. Gatherer Foraging: An Example from the Great Basin , 1991, American Antiquity.

[189]  J. Isaacs The nature of oceanic life. , 1969, Scientific American.

[190]  J. O'connell,et al.  On Evolutionary Ecology, Selectionist Archaeology, and Behavioral Archaeology , 1999, American Antiquity.

[191]  D. Yesner Origins and development of maritime adaptations in the northwest pacific region of north America : A zooarchaeological perspective , 1998 .

[192]  H. N. Michael,et al.  The Soviet Far East in antiquity : an archaeological and historical study of the Maritime region of the U.S.S.R. , 1967 .

[193]  Jeffrey T. Clark,et al.  Early settlement in the indo-pacific , 1991 .

[194]  A. Bilsborough The diet of early man , 1977 .

[195]  Geoff Bailey,et al.  The role of molluscs in coastal economies: The results of midden analysis in Australia , 1975 .

[196]  G. Clark Whales as an Economic Factor in Prehistoric Europe , 1947, Antiquity.

[197]  A. Jerardino Changes in Shellfish Species Composition and Mean Shell Size from a Late-Holocene Record of the West Coast of Southern Africa , 1997 .

[198]  A. Thorne,et al.  Australia's oldest human remains: age of the Lake Mungo 3 skeleton. , 1999, Journal of human evolution.

[199]  J. Arnold,et al.  Prehistoric Marine Mammal Hunting on California's Northern Channel Islands , 1998, American Antiquity.

[200]  R. Klein,et al.  Middle and Later Stone Age large mammal and tortoise remains from Die Kelders Cave 1, Western Cape Province, South Africa. , 2000, Journal of human evolution.

[201]  C. Stringer,et al.  Gibraltar Neanderthals and results of recent excavations in Gorham's, Vanguard and Ibex Caves , 1999, Antiquity.

[202]  J. Clottes,et al.  The Cave beneath the Sea: Paleolithic Images at Cosquer , 1996 .

[203]  K. Kuman,et al.  The Lower Paleolithic Site at Hoxne , 1994 .

[204]  P. Clark,et al.  Willandra Lakes Archaeological Investigations 1968–98 , 1998 .

[205]  R. Bednarik An experiment in Pleistocene Seafaring , 1998 .

[206]  Kate Morse Mandu Mandu Creek rockshelter: Pleistocene human coastal occupation of North West Cape, Western Australia , 1988 .

[207]  N. Rybczynski,et al.  Human Activities and Site Formation at Modern Lake Margin Foraging Camps in Kenya , 1999 .

[208]  N. Fleming,et al.  Quaternary Coastlines and Marine Archeology: Towards the Prehistory of Land Bridges and Continental Shelves , 1987 .

[209]  Jim Allen,et al.  The Pleistocene—Holocene Transition in Greater Australia , 1996 .

[210]  Ronald Singer,et al.  Excavation of the Clactonian Industry at the Golf Course, Clacton-on-Sea, Essex , 1973, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society.

[211]  J. Clottes,et al.  The Cosquer Cave on Cape Morgiou, Marseilles , 1992, Antiquity.