000 01674cab a2200265 a 4500
999 _c24530
_d24530
001 024530
003 UAHC_CL
005 20170810120347.0
008 010801b xx j 000 1 eng
040 _aUAHC_CL
_cUAHC_CL
_dUAHC_CL
100 1 _aJochim, Michael
245 1 4 _aThe Magdalenian colonization of southern Germany.
260 _aArlington
_bAmerican Antropological Association
_c1999
500 _aEn: American Anthropologist. -- Vol. 101 No. 1(marzo 1999), pp. 129-142. ISSN 00027294
520 _aAlthough the topics of migration and colonization have received renewed archaeological attention in recent years, their relevance to the deep past of hunter-gatherer archaeology has been debated. The Magdalenian colonization of southern Germany after the last glacial maximum, ca. 15,000-13,000 B.P., presents a case study in which many of the debated issues can be explored. Environmental change and relative demographic pressure played a causal role in population movements, leading to a gradual, discontinuous expansion from the Franco-cantabrian refugium. Active social strategies to overcome the risks facing frontier groups helped maintain remarkable uniformity in material culture across hundreds of kilometers, despite shifts in subsistence and settlement patterns required in the newly occupied areas.
650 4 _aARQUEOLOGIA
650 4 _aEDAD DE PIEDRA
650 4 _aMIGRACION
_zEUROPA
700 1 _aHerhahn, Cynthia
700 1 _aStarr, Harry
773 0 _tAmerican anthropologist
_w024522
900 _aAM. ANTHROPOL.-01/99
942 _cREVA
_2ddc