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Ancient Lives Pearson New International Edition, plus MySearchLab without eText - Brian M. Fagan

Ancient Lives Pearson New International Edition, plus MySearchLab without eText

Brian M. Fagan (Autor)

Media-Kombination
2013 | 5th edition
Pearson Education Limited
978-1-4479-6911-2 (ISBN)
CHF 99,95 inkl. MwSt
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Theory and Methods in Archaeology and Prehistory



Written for complete beginners in a narrative style, Ancient Lives is aimed at introductory courses in archaeology and prehistory that cover archaeological methods and theory, as well as world prehistory.



The first half of Ancient Lives covers the basic principles, methods, and theoretical approaches of archaeology. The second half is devoted to a summary of the major developments of human prehistory: the origins of humankind and the archaic world, the origins and spread of modern humans, the emergence of food production, and the beginnings of civilization.



This text is available in a variety of formats - digital and print. Pearson offers its titles on the devices students love through Pearson's MyLab products, CourseSmart, Amazon, and more. To learn more about our programs, pricing options and customization, click the Choices tab.



Learning Goals

Upon completing this book, readers should be able to:



Understand the basic principles of archaeology
Summarize the major developments of human prehistory

In This Section



1.) Brief Contents

2.) Comprehensive



Brief Contents



Part I Archaeology: Studying Ancient Times

Chapter 1 Introducing Archaeology and Prehistory

Chapter 2 The Record of the Past

Chapter 3 Acquiring the Record

Chapter 4 How Did People Live?



Part II Ancient Interactions

Chapter 5 Individuals and Interactions

Chapter 6 Studying the Intangible

Chapter 7 Explaining the Past



Part III The World of the First Humans

Chapter 8 Human Origins

Chapter 9 African Exodus



Part IV Modern Humans Settle the World

Chapter 10 The Great Diaspora



Part V The First Farmers and Civilizations

Chapter 11 The Earliest Farmers

Chapter 12 The First Civilizations

Chapter 13 Early Asian Civilizations



Part VI Ancient America

Chapter 14 Maize, Pueblos, and Mound Builders

Chapter 15 Mesoamerican Civilizations

Chapter 16 Andean Civilizations



Part VII On Being an Archaeologist

Chapter 17 So You Want to Become an Archaeologist



Comprehensive Contents



Contents

Preface

Author's Note

About the Author



Part I Archaeology: Studying Ancient Times

SPECIAL FEATURE: CONSERVATION OF SITES AND FINDS







Chapter 1 Introducing Archaeology and Prehistory

How Archaeology Began

The Discovery of Early Civilizations

DISCOVERY: Austen Henry Layard at Nineveh

The Antiquity of Humankind

The Origins of Scientific Archaeology

Archaeology and Prehistory

Prehistory and World Prehistory

DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: A Short Guide to Archaeological Diversity

Major Developments in Human Prehistory

Why Are Archaeology and World Prehistory Important?

Mysteries of the Past

DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Pseudoarchaeology, or You, Too, Can Be an Armchair Indiana Jones

The Powerful Lure of the Past

Archaeology and Human Diversity

Archaeology as a Political Tool

Archaeology and Economic Development

Garbology

Who Needs the Past?

SITE: Inyan Ceyaka Atonwan, Minnesota

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Chapter 2 The Record of the Past

The Goals of Archaeology

Constructing Culture History

DISCOVERY: The Folsom Bison Kill Site, New Mexico

Reconstructing Ancient Lifeways

SITE: Sounds of the Past

Explaining Cultural Change

The Process of Archaeological Research

DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: An Archaeologist's Ethical Responsibilities

Research Design

Data Acquisition

Analysis

Interpretation

Publication and Curation

What Is Culture?

The Archives of the Past: The Archaeological Record

Preservation Conditions

A Waterlogged Site: Ozette, Washington

A Dry Site: Puruchucho-Huaquerones, Peru

Cold Conditions: Nevado Ampato, Peru

Volcanic Ash: Ceren, El Salvador

DISCOVERY: Tragedy at Ceren, El Salvador

Context

Time and Space

The Law of Association

The Law of Superposition

Summary

Key Terms and

Critical-Thinking Questions



Chapter 3 Acquiring the Record

DISCOVERY: Recording the Behistun Inscription, Iran

How Do You Find Archaeological Sites?

Accidental Discoveries

Deliberate Survey

Settlement Patterns and Settlement Archaeology

Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems (GIS)

SITE: Teotihuacan, Mexico

How Do You Dig Up the Past?

The Ethical Responsibilities of the Excavator

Research Design and Problem-Oriented Excavation

Koster

Types of Excavation

DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Archaeological Sites

Excavation as Recording

How Old Is It?

Relative Chronology

Chronometric Dating

DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Dating the Past

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Chapter 4 How Did People Live?

Technologies of the Ancients

Stone

Bone, Antler, and Ivory

DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Classifying Artifact Types

Wood 88

DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Lithic Analysis

Clay (Ceramics)

Metals and Metallurgy

DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Ceramic Analysis

Basketry and Textiles

SITE: Ancient Wine at Abydos, Egypt

Subsistence: Making a Living

Animal Bones

DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Studying Ancient Subsistence

Plant Remains

DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Flotation Methods

Fishing and Fowling

Reconstructing Ancient Diet

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Part II Ancient Interactions

SPECIAL FEATURE: MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS IN ARCHAEOLOGY SINCE 1798



Chapter 5 Individuals and Interactions

An Individual: OEtzi the Ice Man

Social Ranking

DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: The Law Code of Hammurabi of Babylon, 1760 B.C.

SITE: The Sepulcher of the Maya Lord Pacal, Palenque, Mexico

Gender: Men and Women

Grinding Grain at Abu Hureyra, Syria

The Engendered Past 1

Ethnicity and Inequality

Ideologies of Domination

Artifacts, Social Inequality, and Resistance

Trade and Exchange

DISCOVERY: War Casualties at Thebes, Egypt

Types of Exchange and Trade

Sourcing

DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Obsidian Sourcing

A Unique Portrait of Ancient Trade: The Uluburun Ship

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Chapter 6 Studying the Intangible

A Framework of Common Belief

DISCOVERY: Shang Oracle Bones, China

Ethnographic Analogy and Rock Art



DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Copying South African Rock Paintings



The Archaeology of Death

Artifacts: The Importance of Context

Artifacts and Art Styles



SITE: The Shrine at Phylakopi, Greece





DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: The Ancient Maya World through Glyphs



Sacred Places

Astroarchaeology and Stonehenge

Southwestern Astronomy and Chaco Canyon

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Chapter 7 Explaining the Past

Culture History

Constructing Culture History

Synthesis

A Hierarchy of Archaeological Units

Descriptive Models of Cultural Change

Inevitable Variation

Cultural Selection



DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: A Hierarchy of Archaeological Entities



Invention

Diffusion

Migration

Analogy



DISCOVERY: A Tale of Two Maya Women: Waka, Guatemala



Archaeology by Observation and Experiment

Ethnoarchaeology

Experimental Archaeology

Explaining Cultural Change

Cultural Systems and Cultural Processes



DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Deductive and Inductive Reasoning



Processual Archaeology

People, Not Systems



SITE: Guila Naquitz Cave, Mexico



Cognitive-Processual Archaeology

The Issue of Complexity

Change and No Change

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Part III The World of the First Humans

SPECIAL FEATURE: THE PRE-MODERN WORLD



Chapter 8 Human Origins

The Great Ice Age (c. 2.5 Million to 15,000 Years Ago)

Early Primate Evolution and Adaptation

The Primate Order

"Coming Down from the Trees"

The Fossil Evidence for Human Evolution (7 Million to 1.5 Million Years Ago)



The Earliest Known Hominin: Toumai, Sahelanthropus tchadensis



What Is Australopithecus?

Ardipithecus ramidus



Australopithecus anamensis and Australopithecus afarensis





DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Potassium-Argon Dating



All Kinds of Australopithecines (3 Million to 2.5 Million Years Ago)



Gracile Australopithecines: Australopithecus africanus



Robust Australopithecines: A. aethiopicus, A. boisei, and A. robustus



Australopithecus garhi

Early Homo: Homo habilis (2.5 Million to 2 Million Years Ago)

A Burst of Rapid Change?

Who Was the First Human?

The Earliest Human Technology

Hunters or Scavengers?

SITE: Olduvai Gorge, Tanzania

Plant Foraging and Grandmothering

The Earliest Human Mind

The Development of Language

The Earliest Social Organization

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Chapter 9 African Exodus

Ice Age Background



Homo ergaster in Africa



Homo erectus (c. 1.9 Million to c. 200,000 Years Ago)



Radiating out of Africa



Homo erectus in Asia





The Lifeway of Homo erectus



Hand Axes and Choppers

Language

Archaic Homo sapiens (c. 400,000 to 130,000 Years Ago)



Archaic Homo sapiens: Homo heidelbergensis



SITE: A 400,000-Year-Old Hunt at Schoeningen, Germany

The Neanderthals (c. 200,000 to 30,000 Years Ago)

The Origins of Modern Humans (c. 180,000 to 150,000 Years Ago)

Continuity or Replacement?



Molecular Biology and Homo sapiens





DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: DNA and Prehistory



Ecology and Homo sapiens



Out of Tropical Africa

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Part IV Modern Humans Settle the World

SPECIAL FEATURE: THE SPREAD OF MODERN HUMANS TO 12,000 YEARS AGO



Chapter 10 The Great Diaspora

The Late Ice Age World (50,000 to 15,000 Years Ago)



DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Radiocarbon Dating



The Peopling of Southeast Asia and Australia (c. 50,000 to 15,000 Years Ago)

Late Ice Age Europe: The Cro-Magnons (45,000 to 15,000 Years Ago)

Subsistence

Cro-Magnon Technology

Cro-Magnon Art

Hunter-Gatherers in Eurasia (35,000 to 15,000 Years Ago)

DISCOVERY: Grotte de Chauvet, France

East Asia (35,000 to 15,000 Years Ago)

Sinodonty and Sundadonty

Early Human Settlement of Siberia (Before 20,000 to 15,000 Years Ago)

The First Americans (Before 15,000 Years Ago to 11,000 B.C.)

Settlement before 30,000 Years Ago?

Settlement after 15,000 Years Ago?

SITE: Monte Verde, Chile

The Clovis People (c. 11,200 to 10,900 B.C.)

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Part V The First Farmers and Civilizations

SPECIAL FEATURE: EARLY FOOD PRODUCTION



Chapter 11 The Earliest Farmers

After the Ice Age

Changes in Hunter-Gatherer Societies

Social Complexity among Hunter-Gatherers

DISCOVERY: Hunter-Gatherers at Modoc Rockshelter, Illinois

Origins of Food Production



DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) Radiocarbon Dating



Consequences of Food Production

The First Farmers in Southwestern Asia



DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Domesticating Wheat and Barley



Egypt and the Nile Valley

Early Agriculture in Anatolia

SITE: Ritual Buildings in Southeastern Turkey

European Farmers

Early Agriculture in South and East Asia

The Indus Valley

Rice Cultivation in Southern China

SITE: Easton Down and the Avebury Sacred Landscape, England

The First Farmers in Northern China

Navigators and Chiefs in the Pacific (2000 B.C. to Modern Times)

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Chapter 12 The First Civilizations

SPECIAL FEATURE: OLD WORLD CIVILIZATIONS

What Is a State-Organized Society?

Cities

Theories of the Origins of States

The Collapse of Civilizations

Early Civilization in Mesopotamia (5500 to 3100 B.C.)

The First Cities: Uruk

The Sumerians (c. 3100 to 2334 B.C.)

DISCOVERY: The Temple at Eridu, Iraq



DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: The Sumerians



Ancient Egyptian Civilization (c. 3100 B.C. to 30 B.C.)

Predynastic Egypt: Ancient Monopoly? (5000 to 3100 B.C.)

Dynastic Egyptian Civilization (c. 3100 to 30 B.C.)

SITE: The Step Pyramid at Saqqara



DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Ahmose, Son of Ebana



Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Chapter 13 Early Asian Civilizations

South Asia: The Harappan Civilization (c. 2700 to 1700 B.C.)

Mature Harappan Civilization

South Asia after the Harappans (1700 to 180 B.C.)

The Origins of Chinese Civilization (2600 to 1100 B.C.)

Royal Capitals

Royal Burials

Bronze Working

Shang Warriors

The War Lords (1100 to 221 B.C.)

DISCOVERY: The Burial Mound of Emperor Shihuangdi, China

Southeast Asian Civilization (A.D. 1 to 1500)

The Angkor State (A.D. 802 to 1430)

SITE: Angkor Wat, Cambodia

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Part VI Ancient America

SPECIAL FEATURE: NATIVE AMERICAN CIVILIZATIONS



Chapter 14 Maize, Pueblos, and Mound Builders

North America after First Settlement

SITE: The Olsen-Chubbock Bison Kill, Colorado

The Story of Maize

Mesoamerica: Guila Naquitz and Early Cultivation

The Earliest Maize

Andean Farmers

The North American Southwest (300 B.C. to Modern Times)



DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Dendrochronology (Tree-Ring Dating)



Hohokam, Mogollon, and Ancestral Pueblo

Mound Builders in Eastern North America (2000 B.C. to A.D. 1650)

Adena and Hopewell

The Mississippian Tradition

SITE: Moundville, Alabama

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Chapter 15 Mesoamerican Civilizations

The Olmec (1500 to 500 B.C.)

Ancient Maya Civilization (Before 1000 B.C. to A.D. 1519)

Beginnings (Before 1000 to 300 B.C.)

Kingship

Classic Maya Civilization (A.D. 300 to 900)

The Classic Maya Collapse



DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: The Hieroglyphic Stairway at Copan





DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Studying the Maya Collapse at Copan



The Rise of Highland Civilization (1500 to 200 B.C.)

Teotihuacan (200 B.C. to A.D. 750)



DOING ARCHAEOLOGY: Life in Teotihuacan's Barrios



The Toltecs (650 to 1200)

Aztec Civilization (1200 to 1521)

Tenochtitlan

SITE: The Great Temple at Tenochtitlan

The World of the Fifth Sun

The Aztec State

The Spanish Conquest

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Chapter 16 Andean Civilizations

The Maritime Foundations of Andean Civilization

Coastal Foundations (2500 to 900 B.C.)

Caral

El Paraiso and Huaca Florida

The Early Horizon and Chavin de Huantar (900 to 200 B.C.)

The Initial Period

Irrigation Agriculture Inland (After 1800 B.C.)

The Lake Titicaca Basin: Chiripa and Pukara (1000 B.C. to A.D. 100)

The Moche State (200 B.C. to A.D. 700)

DISCOVERY: The Lords of Sipan, Peru



The Middle Horizon: Tiwanaku and Wari (600 to 1000) 423



Tiwanaku

Wari

The Late Intermediate Period: Sican and Chimu (700 to 1460)

The Late Horizon: The Inka State (1476 to 1534)

SITE: Cuzco, the Imperial Inka Capital

The Spanish Conquest (1532 to 1534)

Summary

Key Terms and Sites

Critical-Thinking Questions



Part VII On Being an Archaeologist



Chapter 17 So You Want to Become an Archaeologist

Archaeology as a Profession

Deciding to Become an Archaeologist

Gaining Fieldwork Experience

Career Opportunities

Academic Qualifications and Graduate School

Thoughts on Not Becoming a Professional Archaeologist

Our Responsibilities to the Past

A Simple Code of Archaeological Ethics for All

Summary

Key Term

Critical-Thinking Questions



Glossary

References

Credits

Index

Erscheint lt. Verlag 30.10.2013
Verlagsort Harlow
Sprache englisch
Maße 215 x 275 mm
Gewicht 1020 g
Themenwelt Sozialwissenschaften Ethnologie
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
ISBN-10 1-4479-6911-1 / 1447969111
ISBN-13 978-1-4479-6911-2 / 9781447969112
Zustand Neuware
Informationen gemäß Produktsicherheitsverordnung (GPSR)
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