Cristin-resultat-ID: 1400115
Sist endret: 23. januar 2017, 16:30
NVI-rapporteringsår: 2016
Resultat
Vitenskapelig Kapittel/Artikkel/Konferanseartikkel
2016

Exploring Trajectories towards Social Complexity: Marine Foragers in the Archipelagos of Tierra del Fuego and Norway

Bidragsytere:
  • Atilio Francisco Zangrando
  • Angélica M. Tivoli
  • Hein Bjartmann Bjerck
  • Heidi Mjelva Breivik
  • Silje Elisabeth Fretheim og
  • Ernesto Piana

Bok

Om resultatet

Vitenskapelig Kapittel/Artikkel/Konferanseartikkel
Publiseringsår: 2016
Sider: 123 - 138
ISBN:
  • 9781781791363

Klassifisering

Fagfelt (NPI)

Fagfelt: Arkeologi og konservering
- Fagområde: Humaniora

Beskrivelse Beskrivelse

Tittel

Exploring Trajectories towards Social Complexity: Marine Foragers in the Archipelagos of Tierra del Fuego and Norway

Sammendrag

This paper explores the progressive views that frame the history of marine foragers from simple to complex organizations. Based on the ethnographic and archaeological records of the complex hunter-gatherers in the Northwest Coast of North America, three evidences are normally discussed to recognize complexity: Settlement patterns, decoration on portable objects and fishing intensification. This paper compares these archaeological measures between the Northwest Coast and two other landscapes with similar natural settings: The marine hunter-gatherers in Mesolithic Norway and the Beagle Channel in southernmost Argentina. Since the criteria used to assess the archaeological record vary between regions and scientific traditions, the evaluations of changes towards complexity are many-sided and ambiguous. In this paper the following arguments are supported: 1. Structural changes are not always seen in settlement patterns among these societies and when these changes are observed in some areas, they do not reach the same archaeological measures as identified for the Northwest Coast; 2. Structural changes in settlement patterns are not always accompanied by changes in other social complexity markers (e.g. art production, fishing intensification, etc.); 3. Social complexity is not the only condition for the production of decorated artefacts; 4. Not all high latitude marine hunter-gatherers that intensified fish resources may classify as 'complex' or ‘semi-sedentary’ societies.

Bidragsytere

Atilio Francisco Zangrando

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Argentina

Angélica M. Tivoli

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Argentina

Hein Bjartmann Bjerck

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Institutt for arkeologi og kulturhistorie ved Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet

Heidi Mjelva Breivik

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Institutt for arkeologi og kulturhistorie ved Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet

Silje Elisabeth Fretheim

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Institutt for arkeologi og kulturhistorie ved Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet
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Resultatet er en del av Resultatet er en del av

Marine Ventures - Archaeological perspectives on Human-Sea relations.

Bjerck, Hein Bjartmann; Breivik, Heidi Mjelva; Fretheim, Silje Elisabeth; Piana, Ernesto; Skar, Birgitte; Tivoli, Angélica M.; Zangrando, Atilio Francisco. 2016, Equinox Publishing. NTNU, ARGENTINAVitenskapelig antologi/Konferanseserie
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