4.2 Article

Social networks and information: Non-utilitarian mobility among hunter-gatherers

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHAEOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 2, Pages 259-270

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaa.2005.11.004

Keywords

Mesolithic; upper Paleolithic; southwestern Germany; hunter-gatherer; spatial organization; spatial scale

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Hunter-gatherer mobility is not always related to the positioning of people for optimal exploitation of subsistence resources. Another essential reason for forager mobility is the establishment and maintenance of a network of social relations which provides a flow of information among widely scattered social groups and functions as a safety net in situations of local resource scarcity. It is proposed that the frequency and spatial scale of such movement can be related to temporal and spatial patterns of variation in resource availability. Then, a general, heuristic model of the spatial organization of band-level foraging groups is developed within which to situate this kind of non-utilitarian movement. This model ties informational and network mobility to minimal and maximal foraging bands and provides quantitative estimates of the spatial scales involved. The usefulness of the approach developed is illustrated with an evaluation of the archaeoloszical data for the transport of exotic materials in the late Upper Paleolithic and Early Mesolithic periods in southwestern Germany. Significant differences in the frequencies of transport of different kinds of exotics have been observed between these periods. These differences can be explained within the framework of information on changing patterns of temporal and spatial resource availability and the models developed here. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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