Week 4 Part 3 Flashcards
Taphonomy is…
The study of the transformation of buried remains
Why is taphonomy significant? What does it allow us to do?
Allows us to distinguish cultural and human processes in terms of the transformation of remains
-> reconstructs a chronology
How do we determine a home base?
- Clusters of depositions represent locations hominins continually returned to
What can taphonomy tell us about hominin diet? What is it indicated by? 2 points, 1 point
- Paranthropus: hard and gritty flora
- Australopithecus / Early Homo: Much more omnivorous
As indicated by:
Cut marks and fracture patterns hominin butchery
What are the pros and cons for meat consumption? 5 points
Pros:
- Meat= concentrated source of calories
- Contains much less toxic chemicals than plants
- Meat more quickly digested
Cons:
- Hunting and scavenging riskier
- Meat spoils quickly - parasite risk
However, a cluster of bones doesn’t necessarily mean hominin butchery. Why? 2 points
- Dumping by scavengers or predators
- Natural events: floods, tides
What was the carnivore- hominin - carnivore model? Why is it wrong?
- Dictates that during this time, predators would kill the prey, then hominins arrive, then scavengers
Wrong because…
- Cut marks suggest that hominins were regularly primary predators
3 Key points?
- Aspects of behavioural modernity have their roots in the early hominins
- Incorporating stratigraphic analysis, taphonomy, and zooarchaeological datasets have extended the time frames for significant shifts