1. Archaeology and the Anthropocene What Is the
Anthropocene? * The Perspective of Archaeology * Polynesia and the
North Atlantic: Islands as Laboratories * Methods: Survey and
Excavation * How Have Humans Made Their World?
2. Discovering Diversity: Modern Human Origins Diversity of
Humans: Homo sapiens and Neanderthals * Modern Humans * Lascaux
Cave and the Human Experience of the Ice Age * Additional Human
Experiences in the Ice Age * Human Culture Begins to Shape the
Anthropocene * Protecting Cultural Diversity
Global Timeline 1: Human Origins and Migrations
3. Technology Makes the Human: Stone, Metal, and Organic
Material Culture Stone Tools and the Discovery of Time * The
Mechanics of Flintknapping * Stone Tools as Evidence of Human
Adaptation * Metalworking, a New Technology for Communities *
Perishable Technologies: Revelations from the Iceman * Technology,
the Environment, and the Anthropocene
4. Peopling the World: Human Dispersals to Australia, the
Americas, and the Pacific Inhabiting Australia * Human
Dispersals in the Americas * Inhabiting the Pacific * Methods:
Archaeological Survey * Peopling and the Anthropocene
Global Timeline 2: People and Societies
5. Digging In: Responding to Climate Change in the American
Southwest The American Southwest * Methods: Excavation * The
Colorado Plateau and the Chaco Phenomenon * Understanding Ancient
Pueblo Society: Broken K Pueblo * Other People of the Southwest *
The Southwest and the Changing Environment
6. Extinctions in the Past Big Game Hunters: The Clovis
People * Radiocarbon Dating * The Spread of Clovis * Hunting
Megafauna * Mastodons and the Role of a Changing Environment *
South America: The Giant Ground Sloth * The Role of Humans in
Extinction Events
7. Understanding Human Decisions: Evolutionary and Social
Theory Bison Hunters of the American Great Plains *
Zooarchaeology * Bison Hunting and Butchering in Context * South
Pacific: Conflict and Fortification in Fiji * Europe: Deciding With
or Against a Community in St. Kilda * The Amazon: Decision-Making
Today
8. Producing Food: Domestication and Its Consequences in
Southwest and East Asia Southwest Asia: The First Settlements *
What Led to the Development of Farming? * Archaebotany and the
Evidence for Food Production * Domestication: A Two-Way Process *
China: Independent Domestication and Rice * The Consequences of
Farming * The Critical Role of the Community in Food Production
Global Timeline 3: Domestication
9. Individuals and Identity: Agency in History Studying
Identity * Mesoamerica: The Aztecs * Cortes and La Malinche *
Textiles, Identity, and Gender * Bioarchaeology * Inequality and
Structural Violence in Prehistory * Agency, Identity, and the
Anthropocene
10. Feeding Cities: Urbanism and Agriculture Mesoamerica:
Discovering the Maya * Maize and the Maya * The Maya City *
Southeast Asia: Irrigation and Agriculture at Angkor * The State *
The Environmental Perils of Intensification * Cities, Surplus, and
the Elite
11. Building Monuments, Building Society: Collective Labor as
Social Identity Monuments and Landscapes * Ancient Egypt:
Building the Egyptian State * Monuments Among Mobile Communities *
Stonehenge and the Pastoralist Landscape of Neolithic Britain *
North America: The Hopewell Earthworks
12. Conspicuous Consumption: Feasts, Burials, and Sacrifice
Chiefs and Hoards * Feasting * Residue Analysis * Reciprocity * The
Ultimate Sacrifice: Human * Europe: The Burial of Viking and
Anglo-Saxon Ships * Is Conspicuous Consumption Inevitable?
13. Writing: A History of Access to Information Writing in
Many Contexts * Writings of the Maya * Writings of the Sumerians *
Ancient Chinese Writing * Alphabetic Writing * Preservation of
Writing Systems * Without Writing: Systems of Notation * North
Africa and Arabia: Literacy without Settlement * Writing and the
Anthropocene
14. Extracting the Modern World: Fishing, Mining, and
Slavery Extractivism, Markets, and the Environment * Fishing
and Maritime Extractivism * Underwater Archaeology * Extracted
Minerals in the New World * Extracting People: The Slave Trade *
Extractivism and the Anthropocene
15. The Future of the Anthropocene The Challenges Ahead *
Extinctions and Increasing Diversity * Population Growth *
Fossil-Fuel Consumption and Innovation * Understand Your Agency
Glossary Sources of Quotations
Sources of Illustrations
Index
A groundbreaking new textbook that brings a highly topical, environmental perspective to the story of how humans have shaped the world.
Joy McCorriston is Professor of Anthropology at The Ohio State University. She researches food production, landscape and paleoenvironments in the ancient Near East and co-directs field research in Arabia. Julie Field is Associate Professor of Anthropology at The Ohio State University. Her research focuses on the archaeological detection of human-environmental interaction, in particular the colonization and transformation of islands by Pacific Island voyagers.
'I love the inclusive nature of its content in terms of global prehistory - it covers geographies and cultures that are often neglected in the teaching of archaeology' - James Taylor, University of York
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