Publication | Closed Access
Paleolithic Population Growth Pulses Evidenced by Small Animal Exploitation
566
Citations
18
References
1999
Year
EngineeringPaleolithic ArchaeologyIntraguild PredationMammalogyEvolutionary BiologySmall GamePredator-prey InteractionPopulation DynamicDemographic PulsesMarine BiologyPopulation EcologyHuman Population DensitiesAnimal BehaviorSmall Animal Exploitation
Variations in small game hunting along the northern and eastern rims of the Mediterranean Sea and results from predator-prey simulation modeling indicate that human population densities increased abruptly during the late Middle Paleolithic and again during the Upper and Epi-Paleolithic periods. The demographic pulses are evidenced by increasing reliance on agile, fast-reproducing partridges, hares, and rabbits at the expense of slow-reproducing but easily caught tortoises and marine shellfish and, concurrently, climate-independent size diminution in tortoises and shellfish. The results indicate that human populations of the early Middle Paleolithic were exceptionally small and highly dispersed.
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