Maritime Hunter-Gatherers: Ecology and Prehistory [and Comments and Reply] Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • In a recent discussion of prehistoric developments in coastal Peru, Osborn has drawn attention to the "uniqueness" of the Peruvian littoral in providing large amounts of nutrients to support locally high population densities and a base for the development of Peruvian civilization. This bounteous resource base is contrasted with that of other maritime environments, which are seen to be relatively unproductive. The present article takes issue with that viewpoint, arguing instead that the maritime and coastal environments occupied by humans are generally highly productive and have uniformly supported relatively dense populations of hunter-gatherers. Rather than arguing for the uniqueness of the Peruvian, Northwest Coast, or other situations where complex societies developed on a coastal base, it seems more profitable to develop a "midle-range" theory which will encompass these situations within the variability of maritime hunter-gatherers in general. To this end, I have suggested ten basic features that distinguish maritime-adapted populations (high resource biomass, high resource diversity, low resource seasonality, "unearned" resources, linear settlement patterns, sedentism, technological complexity, cooperative socioeconomic forms for resources explotation, lower dependency ratios, high population densities, and territoriality, interpopulation resource competition, and warfare). This in not an idle exercise, since without a general theory of maritime adaptation it is impossible to achieve and explanation of the origins of maritime adaptation. At minimum, such an explantion would have to encompass both the origins of maritime exploitation during the Upper Palaeolithic and the worldwide intensification of maritime exploitation, particularly shellfish collection, during middle Holocene times. Ecological factors, particularly climate and sea-level changes, offer the most parsimonious explanations for these observed worldwide trends.

published proceedings

  • Current Anthropology

author list (cited authors)

  • Yesner, D. R., Ayres, W. S., Carlson, D. L., Davis, R. S., Dewar, R., Hassan, F. A., ... Wreschner, E. E

citation count

  • 172

complete list of authors

  • Yesner, David R||Ayres, William S||Carlson, David L||Davis, Richard S||Dewar, Robert||Hassan, Fekri A||Hayden, Brian||Lischka, Joseph J||Sheets, Payson D||Osborn, Alan||Pokotylo, David L||Rogers, Tom||Spanier, Ehud||Turner, BL||Wreschner, Ernst E

publication date

  • December 1980