Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T09:10:34.024Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘Man the symboller’. A contemporary origins myth

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 November 2013

Abstract

Symbolism, symbolically mediated culture and the production of symbolically charged artefacts are today almost unanimously accepted in palaeoanthropology as the defining hallmarks of cognitively and behaviourally modern human beings. This orthodoxy, however, suffers from a number of serious problems, including pervasive dualisms, an internally contradictory methodology and an unwillingness to grapple critically with the symbolism concept. It is suggested that the symbolism paradigm originated in the ideas of Leslie White in the 1940s and 1950s, but did not become a serious presence in palaeoanthropology until the 1980s. This is explained in terms of the adoption of cladistic phylogenetics in that period, and by reference to new evidence that removed Neanderthals from the ancestry of living peoples. The implications of the growing body of evidence for Neanderthal symbolism are discussed. It is concluded that the symbolism paradigm is essentialist and ahistorical, and has acquired the character of an origins myth.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2013 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ambrose, S.H., 1998: Chronology of the Later Stone Age and food production in East Africa, Journal of archaeological science 25, 377–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ameloot-van der Heijden, N., 1993: L'industrie laminaire du niveau CA du gisement Paléolithique moyen de Riencourt-les-Baupaume (Pas de Calais), Bulletin de la Société Préhistoire Française 90, 324–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bailey, S.E.,Weaver, T.D. and Hublin, J.J., 2009: Who made the Aurignacian and other early Upper Paleolithic industries? Journal of human evolution 57, 1126.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barham, L.S., 2002: Systematic pigment use in the Middle Pleistocene of south-central Africa, Current anthropology 43, 181–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barham, L.S., 2007: Modern is as modern does? Technological trends and thresholds in the south-central African record, in Mellars, P., Boyle, K., Bar-Yosef, O. and Stringer, C. (eds), Rethinking the human revolution, Cambridge, 165–76.Google Scholar
Barker, G.,Barton, H., Bird, M., Daly, P., Datan, I., Dykes, A., Farr, L., Gilbertson, D., Harrisson, B., Hunt, C., Higham, T.F.G., Kealhofer, L., Lewis, K.J.H., McLaren, S., Paz, V., Pike, A., Piper, P., Pyatt, B., Rabett, R., Reynolds, T., Rose, J., Rushworth, G., Stephens, M., Stringer, C., Thompson, J. and Turney, C., 2007: The ‘human revolution’ in lowland tropical southeast Asia. The antiquity and behaviour of anatomically modern humans at Niah Cave (Sarawak, Borneo), Journal of human evolution 52, 243–61.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bednarik, R.G., 1992: Palaeoart and archaeological myths, Cambridge archaeological journal 2, 2757.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bednarik, R.G., 1995: Concept-mediated marking in the Lower Palaeolithic, Current anthropology 36, 605–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benazzi, S.,Douka, K., Fornai, C., Bauer, C.C., Kullmer, O., Svoboda, J., Pap, I., Mallegni, F., Bayle, P., Coquerelle, M., Condemi, S., Ronchitelli, A., Harvati, K. and Weber, G.W., 2011: Early dispersal of modern humans in Europe and implications for Neanderthal behaviour, Nature 479, 525–28.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Binford, L.R., 1962: Archaeology as anthropology, American antiquity 28, 217–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Binford, L.R., 1981: Bones. Ancient men and modern myths, New York.Google Scholar
Binford, L.R., 1989: Isolating the transition to cultural adaptations. An organizational approach, in Trinkaus, E. (ed.), The emergence of modern humans, Cambridge, 1841.Google Scholar
Binford, S.R., 1968: A structural comparison of disposal of the dead in the Mousterian and the Upper Paleolithic, Southwestern journal of anthropology 24, 139–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blasco, R., and Fernández Peris, J., 2009: Middle Pleistocene bird consumption at Level XI of Bolomor Cave (Valencia, Spain), Journal of archaeological science 36, 2213–23.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boas, F., 1897: The social organization and the secret societies of the Kwakiutl Indians. The United States National Museum report for 1895, Washington, DC, 311–38.Google Scholar
Boas, F., 1908: Decorative designs of Alaskan needlecases. A study in the history of conventional designs, based on materials in the U.S. National Museum, Proceedings of the United States National Museum 34, 321–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boas, F., 1911. The mind of primitive man, New York.Google Scholar
Bordes, F., 1968: The Old Stone Age, London.Google Scholar
Botha, R., 2008: Prehistoric shell beads as a window on language evolution, Language and communication 28, 197212.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Botha, R., 2009: Theoretical underpinnings of inferences about language evolution, in Botha, R. and Knight, C. (eds), The cradle of language, Oxford, 93111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Botha, R., 2010: On the soundness of inferring modern language from symbolic behaviour, Cambridge archaeological journal 20, 345–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bouzouggar, A.,Barton, N., Vanhaeren, M., d'Errico, F., Collcut, S.N., Higham, T.F.G., Hodge, E., Parfitt, S., Rhodes, E., Schwenninger, J.L., Stringer, C., Turner, E., Ward, S., Moutmir, A. and Stamboul, A., 2007: 82,000-year-old shell beads from North Africa and implications for the origins of modern human behaviour, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 104, 9964–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradley, R., 2000: An archaeology of natural places, London.Google Scholar
Byers, M., 1994: Symboling and the Middle to Upper Paleolithic transition. A theoretical and methodological critique, Current anthropology 35, 369–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cann, R.L.,Brown, W.M. and Wilson, A.C., 1984: Polymorphic sites and the mechanism of evolution in human mitochondrial DNA, Genetics 106, 479–99.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cann, R.L.,Stoneking, M. and Wilson, A.C., 1987: Mitochondrial DNA and human evolution, Nature 325, 3136.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Carbonell, E., and Mosquera, M., 2006: The emergence of a symbolic behaviour. The sepulchral pit of Sima de los Huesos, Sierra de Atapuerca, Burgos, Spain, Comptes rendus palévol 5, 155–60.Google Scholar
Caron, F.,d'Errico, F., Del Moral, P., Santos, F. and Zilhão, J., 2011: The reality of Neandertal symbolic behavior at the Grotte du Renne, Arcy-sur-Cure, France, PLoS ONE 6, e21545.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cartmill, M., 2001: Taxonomic revolutions and the animal–human boundary, in Corbey, R. and Roebroeks, W. (eds), Studying human origins. Disciplinary history and epistemology, Amsterdam, 97106.Google Scholar
Chase, P.G., 2006. The emergence of culture. The evolution of a uniquely human way of life, NewYork.Google Scholar
Chase, P.G., and Dibble, H.L., 1987: Middle Palaeolithic symbolism. A review of current evidence and interpretation, Journal of anthropological archaeology 6, 263–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chase, P.G., and Dibble, H.L., 1990: On the emergence of modern humans, Current anthropology 38, 5859.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chazan, M. 1995: Conceptions of time and the development of Paleolithic chronology, American anthropologist 97, 457–67.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, G.A., and Lindly, J.M., 1989: The case for continuity. Observations on the biocultural transition in Europe and Western Asia, in Mellars, P. and Stringer, C. (eds), The human revolution. Behavioural and biological perspectives in the origins of modern humans, Edinburgh, 626–76.Google Scholar
Clark, J.G.D., 1967: The Stone Age hunters, London.Google Scholar
Conard, N.J., 1990: Laminar lithic assemblages from the last interglacial complex in northwestern Europe, Journal of anthropological research 46, 243–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Conard, N.J., 2003: Palaeolithic ivory sculptures from southwestern Germany and the origins of figurative art, Nature 426, 830–32.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Conard, N.J., 2009: A female figurine from the basal Aurignacian of Hohle Fels Cave in southwestern Germany, Nature 459, 248–52.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Conard, N.J.,Malina, M. and Münzel, S.C., 2009: New flutes document the earliest musical tradition in southwestern Germany, Nature 460, 737–40.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Conneller, C., 2010: An archaeology of materials. Technologies of transformation in early prehistoric Europe, London.Google Scholar
Coolidge, F.L., and Wynn, T., 2001: Executive functions of the frontal lobes and the evolutionary ascendancy of Homo sapiens, Cambridge archaeological journal 11, 255–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coolidge, F.L., and Wynn, T., 2005: Working memory, its executive functions, and the emergence of modern thinking, Cambridge archaeological journal 15, 526.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coolidge, F.L., and Wynn, T., 2007: The working memory account of Neandertal cognition. How phonological storage capacity may be related to recursion and the pragmatics of modern speech, Journal of human evolution 52, 707–10.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Coolidge, F.L., and Wynn, T., 2009: The rise of Homo sapiens. The evolution of modern thinking, Chichester.Google Scholar
Darwin, C., 1871: The descent of man and selection in relation to sex, London.Google Scholar
Davidson, I., and Noble, W., 1993: Tools and language in human evolution, in Gibson, K.R. and Ingold, T. (eds), Tools, language and cognition in human evolution, Cambridge, 363–88.Google Scholar
Deacon, T.W., 1997: The symbolic species. The co-evolution of language and the brain, New York.Google Scholar
D'Errico, F., 2003: The invisible frontier. A multiple species model for the origin of behavioral modernity, Evolutionary anthropology 12, 188202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
D'Errico, F., and Henshilwood, C., 2007: Additional evidence for bone technology in the southern African Middle Stone Age, Journal of human evolution 52, 142–63.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
D'Errico, F.,Henshilwood, C., Vanhaeren, M. and van Niekerk, K., 2005: Nassarius kraussianus shell beads from Blombos Cave. Evidence for symbolic behaviour in the Middle Stone Age, Journal of human evolution 48, 324.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
D'Errico, F.,Vanhaeren, M. and Wadley, L., 2008: Possible shell beads from the Middle Stone Age layers of Sibudu Cave, South Africa, Journal of archaeological science 35, 26752685.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
D'Errico, F,Zilhão, J., Baffier, D., Julien, M. and Pelegrin, J., 1998: Neandertal acculturation in western Europe? A critical review of the evidence and its interpretation, Current anthropology 39, S144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dibble, H.L., 1984: Interpreting typological variation of Middle Paleolithic scrapers. Function, style or sequence of reduction? Journal of field archaeology 11, 431–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dibble, H.L., 1987: The interpretation of Middle Paleolithic scraper morphology, American antiquity 52, 109–17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dibble, H.L., 1989: The implications of stone tool types for the presence of language during the Lower and Middle Palaeolithic, in Mellars, P. and Stringer, C. (eds), The human revolution. Behavioural and biological perspectives in the origins of modern humans, Edinburgh, 415–32.Google Scholar
Douglas, M., 1966: Purity and danger, London.Google Scholar
Finlayson, C., Brown, K., Blasco, R., Rosell, J., Negro, J.J., Bortolotti, G.R., Finlayson, G., Marco, A. Sánchez, Pacheco, F.G., Vidal, J.R., Carrión, J.S., Fa, D.A. and Llanes, J.M. Rodríguez, 2012: Birds of a feather. Neanderthal exploitation of raptors and corvids, PLos ONE 7, e45927.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frayer, D.W.,Wolpoff, M.H., Thorne, A.G., Smith, F.H. and Pope, G.G., 1993: Theories of modern human origins. The paleontological test, American anthropologist 95, 1450.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gamble, C., 1998: Palaeolithic society and the release from proximity. A network approach to intimate relations, World archaeology 29, 426–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gamble, C., 1999: The Palaeolithic societies of Europe, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Gamble, C., 2012: Creativity and complex society before the Upper Palaeolithic transition. Developments in Quaternary science 16, 1521.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gamble, C., and Porr, M. (eds), 2005: The individual hominid in context, London.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gargett, R.H., 1989: Grave shortcomings. The evidence for Neanderthal burial, Current anthropology 30, 157–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gargett, R.H., 1999: Middle Palaeolithic burial is not a dead issue. The view from Qafzeh, Saint-Césaire, Kebara, Amud, and Dederiyeh, Journal of human evolution 37, 2790.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geertz, C., 1973: The interpretation of cultures, New York.Google Scholar
Grayson, D.K., and Delpech, F., 2002: Specialized early Upper Palaeolithic hunters in southwestern France? Journal of archaeological science 29, 1439–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grayson, D.K., and Delpech, F., 2008: The large mammals of Roc de Combe (Lot, France). The Châtelperronian and Aurignacian assemblages, Journal of anthropological archaeology 27, 338–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Green, R.E.,Krause, J., Briggs, A.W., Maricic, T., Stenzel, U., Kircher, M., Patterson, N., Li, H., Zhai, W., Hsi-Yang Fritz, M., Hansen, N.F., Durand, E.Y., Malaspinas, A.S., Jensen, J.D., Marques-Bonet, T., Alkan, C., Prüfer, K., Meyer, M., Burbano, H.A., Good, J.M., Schultz, R., Aximu-Petri, A., Butthof, A., Höber, B., Höffner, B., Siegemund, M., Weihmann, A., Nusbaum, C., Lander, E.S., Russ, C., Novod, N., Affourtit, J., Egholm, M., Verna, C., Rudan, P., Brajkovic, D., Kucan, Ž., Gušic, I., Doronichev, V.B., Golovanova, L.V., Lalueza-Fox, C., de la Rasilla, M., Fortea, J., Rosas, A., Schmitz, R.W., Johnson, P.L.F., Eichler, E.E., Falush, D., Birney, E., Mullikin, J.C., Slatkin, M., Nielsen, R., Kelso, J., Lachmann, M., Reich, D. and Pääbo, S., 2010: A draft sequence of the Neandertal genome, Science 328, 710–22.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harris, M., 1979: Cultural materialism. The struggle for a science of culture, New York.Google Scholar
Harrold, F., 1989: Mousterian, Chatelperronian, and Early Aurignacian in westem Europe. Continuity or discontinuity?, in Mellars, P. and Stringer, C. (eds), The human revolution. Behavioural and biological perspectives in the origins of modern humans, Edinburgh, 677713.Google Scholar
Hennig, W., 1950: Grundzüge einer Theorie der phylogenetischen Systematik, Berlin.Google Scholar
Hennig, W., 1966: Phylogenetic systematics (tr. Davis, D. and Zangerl, R.), Urbana.Google Scholar
Henshilwood, C.S., 2007: Fully symbolic sapiens behavior. Innovation in the Middle Stone Age at Blombos Cave, South Africa, in Mellars, P., Boyle, K., Bar-Yosef, O. and Stringer, C. (eds), Rethinking the human revolution, Cambridge, 123–32.Google Scholar
Henshilwood, C.S.,d'Errico, F. and Watts, I., 2009: Engraved ochres from the Middle Stone Age levels at Blombos Cave, South Africa, Journal of human evolution 57, 2747.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Henshilwood, C.S., and Dubreuil, B., 2011: The Still Bay and Howiesons Poort, 77–59 ka. Symbolic material culture and the evolution of the mind during the African Middle Stone Age, Current anthropology 52, 361400.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henshilwood, C.S., and Marean, C.W., 2003: The origin of modern human behavior. Critique of the models and their test implications, Current anthropology 44, 627–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Higham, T.,Jacobi, R., Julien, M., David, F., Basell, L., Wood, R., Davies, W. and Bronk Ramsey, C., 2010; Chronology of the Grotte du Renne (France) and implications for the context of ornaments and human remains within the Chatelperronian, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 107, 20234–39.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hockett, B., and Haws, J., 2003: Nutritional ecology and diachronic trends in Paleolithic diet and health, Evolutionary anthropology 12, 211–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodder, I. (ed.), 1982: Symbolic and structural archaeology, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holloway, R.L., 1966: Cranial capacity, neural reorganization, and hominid evolution. A search for more suitable parameters, American anthropologist 68, 103–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holloway, R.L., 1981: Culture, symbols, and human brain evolution, Dialectical anthropology 5, 287303.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hopkinson, T., 2004: Leaf points, landscapes and environment change in the European Late Middle Palaeolithic, in Conard, N. (ed.), Settlement dynamics of the Middle Paleolithic and Middle Stone Age, Vol. 2, Tübingen, 227–58.Google Scholar
Hopkinson, T., 2007: The Middle Palaeolithic leaf points of Europe. Ecology, knowledge and scale, Oxford (BAR International Series 1663).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hopkinson, T., and White, M.J., 2005: The Acheulean and the handaxe. Structure and agency in the Palaeolithic, in Gamble, C. and Porr, M. (eds), The individual hominid in context, London, 1328.Google Scholar
Hovers, E.,Ilani, S., Bar‐Yosef, O. and Vandermeersch, B., 2003: An early case of color symbolism. Ochre use by modern humans in Qafzeh Cave, Current anthropology 44, 491522.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hovers, E.,Kimbel, W.H. and Rak, Y., 2000: The Amud 7 skeleton. Still a burial. Response to Gargett, Journal of human evolution 39, 253–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hublin, J.J.,Spoor, F., Braun, M., Zonneveld, F. and Condemi, S., 1996. A late Neanderthal associated with Upper Palaeolithic artefacts, Nature 381, 224–26.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ingold, T., 2000: ‘People like us’. The concept of the anatomically modern human, in Ingold, T., The perception of the environment. Essays on livelihood, dwelling and skill, London, 373–91.Google Scholar
Jelinek, A.J., 1976: Form, function, and style in lithic analysis, in Cleland, C. (ed.), Essays in honor of James Bennett Griffin, New York, 1933.Google Scholar
Klein, R., 1969: Man and culture in the Pleistocene. A case study, San Francisco.Google Scholar
Klein, R., 1972: Ice-Age hunters of the Ukraine, Chicago.Google Scholar
Klein, R., 1985: Breaking away, Natural history 94, 47.Google Scholar
Klein, R., 1989: The human career. Human biological and cultural origins, Chicago.Google Scholar
Klein, R., 1995: Anatomy, behavior, and modern human origins, Journal of world prehistory 9, 167–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klein, R., 1999: The human career. Human biological and cultural origins, 2nd edn, Chicago.Google Scholar
Klein, R., 2000: Archeology and the evolution of human behavior, Evolutionary anthropology 9, 1736.3.0.CO;2-A>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klein, R., 2008: Out of Africa and the evolution of human behavior, Evolutionary anthropology 17, 267–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knight, C.,Powers, C. and Watts, I., 1995: The human symbolic revolution. A Darwinian account, Cambridge archaeological journal 5, 75114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krause, J.,Orlando, L., Serre, D., Viola, B., Prüfer, K., Richards, M.P., Hublin, J.J., Hänni, C., Derevianko, A.P. and Pääbo, S., 2007: Neanderthals in central Asia and Siberia, Nature 449, 902–4.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kroeber, A.L., and Kluckhohn, C., 1952: Culture. A critical review of concepts and definitions, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Kuhn, S.L., and Stiner, M.C., 2006: What's a mother to do? The division of labor among Neandertals and modern humans in Eurasia, Current anthropology 47, 953–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kunej, D., and Turk, I., 2000: New perspectives on the beginnings of music. Archeological and musicological analysis of a Middle Palaeolithic bone ‘flute’, in Wallin, N.I., Merker, B. and Brown, S. (eds), The origins of music, Cambridge, MA, 235–68.Google Scholar
Leach, E., 1968: Ritual, in Hugh-Jones, S. and Laidlaw, J. (eds), The essential Edmund Leach, Vol. 1, New Haven, 165–73.Google Scholar
Leach, E., 1976: Culture and communication. The logic by which symbols are connected, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leroi-Gourhan, A., 1964: La geste et la parole, Paris.Google Scholar
Leroi-Gourhan, A., 1965: Préhistoire de l'art occidental, Paris.Google Scholar
Lévêque, F., and Vandermeersch, B., 1980: Les découvertes de restes humains dans un horizon castelperronian de Saint-Césaire (Charente-Maritime), Bulletin de la Societé préhistorique française 77, 35.Google Scholar
Lévi-Strauss, C., 1978: Myth and Meaning, London.Google Scholar
McBrearty, S., and Brooks, A., 2000: The revolution that wasn't. A new interpretation of the origin of modern human behavior. Journal of human evolution 39, 453563.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Marean, C.W., 2007: Heading north. An Africanist perspective on the replacement of Neanderthals by modern humans, in Mellars, P., Boyle, K., Bar-Yosef, O. and Stringer, C. (eds), Rethinking the human revolution, Cambridge, 367–79.Google Scholar
Marean, C.M.,Bar-Matthews, M., Bernatchez, J., Fisher, E., Goldberg, P., Herries, A.I.R., Jacobs, Z., Jerardino, A., Karkanas, P., Minichillo, T., Nilssen, P.J., Thompson, E., Watts, I. and Williams, H.M., 2007: Early human use of marine resources and pigment in South Africa during the Middle Pleistocene, Nature 449, 905–8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Marquet, J.C., and Lorblanchet, M., 2003: A Neanderthal face? The proto-figurine from La Roche-Cotard, Langeais (Indre-et-Loire, France), Antiquity 77, 661–70.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshack, A.A., 1976: Some implications of the Paleolithic symbolic evidence for the origins of language, Current anthropology 17, 274–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshack, A.A., 1988: Neanderthals and the human capacity for symbolic thought. Cognitive and problem-solving aspects of Mousterian symbol, in Otte, M. (ed.), L'homme de Néandertal. Actes du colloque international de Liège (4–7 décembre 1986), Vol. 5, La pensée, Liège, 5791.Google Scholar
Marshack, A.A., 1990: Early hominid symbol and evolution of the human capacity, in Mellars, P. (ed.), The emergence of modern humans. An archaeological perspective, Edinburgh, 457–98.Google Scholar
Marshack, A.A., 1996: A Middle Paleolithic symbolic composition from the Golan Heights. The earliest known depictive image, Current anthropology 37, 357–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshack, A.A., 1997: The Berekhat Ram figurine. A late Acheulian carving from the Middle East, Antiquity 71, 327–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mellars, P., 1973: The character of the Middle–Upper Palaeolithic transition in south-west France, in Renfrew, C. (ed.), The explanation of culture change. Models in prehistory, London, 255–76.Google Scholar
Mellars, P., 1989a: Major issues in the emergence of modern humans. Current anthropology 30, 349–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mellars, P., 1989b: Technological changes at the Middle–Upper Palaeolithic transition. Economic, social and cultural perspectives, in Mellars, P. and Stringer, C. (eds), The human revolution. Behavioural and biological perspectives in the origins of modern humans, Edinburgh, 338–65.Google Scholar
Mellars, P., 1996: The Neanderthal legacy. An archaeological perspective from western Europe, Princeton.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mellars, P., 2004a: Neanderthals and the modern human colonization of Europe, Nature 432, 461–65.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mellars, P., 2004b: Reindeer specialization in the early Upper Palaeolithic. The evidence from south west France, Journal of archaeological science 31, 613–17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mellars, P., 2005: The impossible coincidence. A single-species model for the origins of modern human behavior in Europe, Evolutionary anthropology 14, 1227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mithen, S., 1996: The prehistory of the mind. A search for the origins of art, religion and science, London.Google Scholar
Morin, E., and Laroulandie, V., 2012: Presumed symbolic use of diurnal raptors by Neanderthals, PLoS ONE 7, e32856.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Movius, H.L., 1949: Lower Paleolithic archaeology in southern and eastern Asia, studies in physical anthropology 1, 1781.Google Scholar
Movius, H.L.,David, N., Bricker, H. and Clay, R., 1969: The analysis of certain major classes of Upper Palaeolithic tools, American School of Prehistoric Research, Bulletin 26, Cambridge, MA.Google Scholar
Needham, R., 1979: Symbolic classification, Santa Monica.Google Scholar
Nowell, A., 2010: Defining behavioral modernity in the context of Neandertal and anatomically modern human populations, Annual review of anthropology 39, 437–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peresani, M., Fiore, I., Gala, M., Romandini, M. and Tagliacozzo, A., 2011: Late Neandertals and the intentional removal of feathers as evidenced from bird bone taphonomy at Fumane Cave 44 ky B.P., Italy, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 10, 3888–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pfeiffer, J.E., 1982: The creative explosion. An enquiry into the origins of art and religion, New York.Google Scholar
Pike, A.W.G.,Hoffmann, D.L., García-Diez, M., Pettitt, P.B., Alcolea, J., De Balbín, R., González-Sainz, C., de las Heras, C., Lasheras, J.A., Montes, R. and Zilhão, J., 2012: U-series dating of Paleolithic art in 11 caves in Spain, Science 336, 1409–13.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Porr, M., 2011: One step forward, two steps back. The issue of ‘behavioral modernity’ again. A comment on Shea. Current anthropology 52, 581–82.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Powell, A.,Shennan, S. and Thomas, M.G., 2009: Late Pleistocene demography and the appearance of modern human behavior, Science 324, 12981301.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Reich, D.,Patterson, N., Kircher, M., Delfin, F., Nandineni, M.R., Pugach, I., Min-Shan Ko, A., Ko, Y.C., Jinam, T.A., Phipps, M.E., Saitou, N., Wollstein, A., Kayser, M., Pääbo, S. and Stoneking, M., 2011: Denisova admixture and the first modern human dispersals into southeast Asia and Oceania, American journal of human genetics 89, 113.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Riel-Salvatore, J., 2010: A niche construction perspective on the Middle–Upper Paleolithic transition in Italy, Journal of archaeological method and theory 17, 323–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roebroeks, W., and Corbey, R., 2001: Biases and double standards in palaeoanthropology, in Corbey, R. and Roebroeks, W. (eds), Studying human origins. Disciplinary history and epistemology, Amsterdam, 6776.Google Scholar
Rolland, N., and Dibble, H.L., 1990: A new synthesis of Middle Paleolithic variability, American antiquity 55, 480–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sackett, J.R., 1973: Style, function and artefact variability in Palaeolithic assemblages, in Renfrew, C. (ed.), The explanation of culture change. Models in prehistory, London, 317–25.Google Scholar
Sackett, J.R., 1982: Approaches to style in lithic analysis, Journal of anthropological archaeology 1, 59112.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sackett, J.R., 1986: Style, function and assemblage variability. A reply to Binford, American antiquity 51, 628–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sackett, J.R., 1990: Style and ethnicity in archaeology. The case for isochrestism, in Conkey, M. and Hastorf, C. (eds), The uses of style in archaeology, Cambridge, 3243.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M.D., 1959: The social life of monkeys, apes and primitive man, in Spuhler, J.N. (ed.) The evolution of man's capacity for culture, Detroit, 5473.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M.D., 1976: Culture and practical reason, Chicago.Google Scholar
Schwartz, J.H., and Tattersall, I., 2000: The human chin revisited. What is it and who has it? Journal of human evolution 38, 367409.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shea, J.J., 2011: Homo sapiens is as Homo sapiens was, Current anthropology 52, 135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Solecki, R.S., 1975: Shanidar IV, a Neanderthal burial in northern Iraq, Science 190, 880–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Speth, J.D., 2004: News flash. Negative evidence convicts Neanderthals of gross mental incompetence, World archaeology 36, 519–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spuhler, J.N., 1959: Somatic paths to culture, in Spuhler, J.N. (ed.) The evolution of man's capacity for culture, Detroit, 113.Google Scholar
Stoneking, M., and Cann, R.L., 1989: African origin of human mitochondrial DNA, in Mellars, P. and Stringer, C. (eds), The human revolution. Behavioural and biological perspectives in the origins of modern humans, Edinburgh, 1730.Google Scholar
Stringer, C.B., 2002: Modern human origins. Progress and prospects, Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London B 357, 563–79.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stringer, C.B.,Finlayson, J.C., Barton, R.N.E., Fernández-Jalvoe, Y., Cáceres, I., Sabin, R.C., Rhodes, E.J., Currant, A.P., Rodríguez-Vidal, J., Giles-Pacheco, F. and Riquelme-Cantal, J.A., 2008: Neanderthal exploitation of marine mammals in Gibraltar. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 105, 14319–24.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stringer, C.B., and Gamble, C., 1993: In search of the Neanderthals, London.Google Scholar
Stringer, C.B.,Hublin, J.J. and Vandermeersch, B., 1984: The origin of anatomically modern humans in western Europe, in Smith, F.H. and Spencer, F. (eds), The origins of modern humans. A world survey of the fossil evidence, New York, 51136.Google Scholar
Texier, J.P.,Porraz, G., Parkington, J., Rigaud, J.P., Poggenpoel, C., Miller, C., Tribolo, C., Cartwright, C., Coudenneau, A., Klein, R., Steele, T. and Verna, C., 2010: A Howiesons Poort tradition of engraving ostrich eggshell containers dated to 60,000 years ago at Diepkloof Rock Shelter, South Africa, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 107, 6180–85.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turner, V., 1967: The forest of symbols. Aspects of Ndembu ritual, Ithaca, NY.Google Scholar
Valladas, H.,Joron, J.L., Valladas, B., Arensburg, P., Bar-Yosef, O., Belfer, A., Goldberg, P., Laville, H., Meignen, L., Rak, Y., Tchernov, E., Tillier, A.M. and Vandermeersch, B., 1987: Thermoluminescence dates for the Neanderthal burial site at Kebara (Mount Carmel), Israel, Nature 330, 159–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Valladas, H.,Reyss, J.L., Joron, J.L., Valladas, G., Bar-Yosef, O. and Vandermeersch, B., 1988: Thermoluminescence dating of Mousterian ‘proto-Cro-Magnon’ remains from Israel and the origin of modern man, Nature 331, 614–16.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vigilant, L.,Stoneking, M., Harpending, H., Hawkes, K. and Wilson, A.C., 1991: African populations and the evolution of human mitochondrial DNA, Science 253, 1503–7.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wadley, L., 2001: What is cultural modernity? A general view and a South African perspective from Rose Cottage Cave, Cambridge archaeological journal 11, 201–21.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Whallon, R., 1989: Elements of cultural change in the Later Palaeolithic, in Mellars, P. and Stringer, C. (eds), The human revolution. Behavioural and biological perspectives in the origins of modern humans, Edinburgh, 433–54.Google Scholar
White, L.A., 1949: The science of culture. A study of man and civilization, New York.Google Scholar
White, L.A., 1959a: The concept of culture, American anthropologist 61, 227–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, L.A., 1959b: The evolution of culture. The development of civilization to the fall of Rome, New York.Google Scholar
White, R., 1982: Rethinking the Middle/Upper Paleolithic transition, Current anthropology 23, 169–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, R., 1989: Production complexity and standardization in Early Aurignacian bead and pendant manufacture. Evolutionary implications, in Mellars, P. and Stringer, C. (eds), The human revolution. Behavioural and biological perspectives in the origins of modern humans, Edinburgh, 366–90.Google Scholar
Wolpoff, M.H., 1989: The place of the Neandertals in human evolution, in Trinkaus, E. (ed.), The emergence of modern humans. Biocultural adaptations in the later Pleistocene, Cambridge, 97141.Google Scholar
Wolpoff, M.H.,Hawks, J. and Caspari, R., 2000: Multiregional, not multiple origins, American journal of physical anthropology 112, 129–36.3.0.CO;2-K>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolpoff, M.H.,Hawks, J.D., Frayer, D.W. and Hunley, K., 2001: Modern human ancestry at the peripheries. A test of the replacement theory, Science 291, 293–97.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wolpoff, M.H.,Mannheim, B., Mann, A., Hawks, J., Caspari, R., Rosenberg, K.R., Frayer, D.W., Gill, G.W. and Clark, G., 2004. Why not the Neandertals? World archaeology 36, 527–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wright, W.B., 1939: Tools and the man, London.Google Scholar
Wynn, T., 1985: Piaget, stone tools, and the evolution of human intelligence, World archaeology 17, 3243.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wynn, T., 1991: Tools, grammar, and the archaeology of cognition, Cambridge archaeological journal 1, 191206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wynn, T., 1993: Layers of thinking in tool behaviour, in Gibson, K. and Ingold, T. (eds), Tools, language and cognition in human evolution, Cambridge, 389406.Google Scholar
Wynn, T., and Coolidge, F.L., 2007: Did a small but significant enhancement in working memory capacity power the evolution of modern thinking?, in Mellars, P., Boyle, K., Bar-Yosef, O. and Stringer, C. (eds), Rethinking the human revolution. New behavioural and biological perspectives on the origins and dispersal of modern humans, Cambridge, 7990.Google Scholar
Zilhão, J., 2006: Genes, fossils and culture. An overview of the evidence for Neandertal–modern human interaction and admixture, Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 72, 120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zilhão, J., 2007: The emergence of ornaments and art. An archaeological perspective on the origins of ‘behavioral modernity’, Journal of archaeological research, 15, 154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zilhão, J.,Angelucci, D.E., Badal-García, E., d'Errico, F., Daniel, F., Dayet, L., Douka, K., Higham, T.F.G., Martinez-Sanchéz, M.J., Montes-Bernárdez, R., Murcia-Mascarós, S., Pérez-Sirvent, C., Roldán-García, C., Vanhaeren, M., Villaverde, V., Wood, R. and Zapata, J., 2010: Symbolic use of marine shells and mineral pigments by Iberian Neanderthals, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 107, 1023–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zilhão, J., and d'Errico, F., 1999: The chronology and taphonomy of the earliest Aurignacian and its implications for the understanding of Neandertal extinction, Journal of world prehistory 13, 168.CrossRefGoogle Scholar