Amy E. Clark
University of Arizona
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Featured researches published by Amy E. Clark.
Journal of Human Evolution | 2014
Ron Shimelmitz; Steven L. Kuhn; Arthur J. Jelinek; Avraham Ronen; Amy E. Clark; Mina Weinstein-Evron
The use of fire is central to human survival and to the processes of becoming human. The earliest evidence for hominin use of fire dates to more than a million years ago. However, only when fire use became a regular part of human behavioral adaptations could its benefits be fully realized and its evolutionary consequences fully expressed. It remains an open question when the use of fire shifted from occasional and opportunistic to habitual and planned. Understanding the time frame of this technological mutation will help explain aspects of our anatomical evolution and encephalization over the last million years. It will also provide an important perspective on hominin dispersals out of Africa and the colonization of temperate environments, as well as the origins of social developments such as the formation of provisioned base camps. Frequencies of burnt flints from a 16-m-deep sequence of archaeological deposits at Tabun Cave, Israel, together with data from the broader Levantine archaeological record, demonstrate that regular or habitual fire use developed in the region between 350,000-320,000 years ago. While hominins may have used fire occasionally, perhaps opportunistically, for some million years, we argue here that it only became a consistent element in behavioral adaptations during the second part of the Middle Pleistocene.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Randall White; Romain Mensan; Raphaëlle Bourrillon; Catherine Cretin; Thomas Higham; Amy E. Clark; Matthew Sisk; Elise Tartar; Philippe Gardère; Paul Goldberg; Jacques Pelegrin; Hélène Valladas; Nadine Tisnérat-Laborde; Jacques de Sanoit; Dominique Chambellan; Laurent Chiotti
We report here on the 2007 discovery, in perfect archaeological context, of part of the engraved and ocre-stained undersurface of the collapsed rockshelter ceiling from Abri Castanet, Dordogne, France. The decorated surface of the 1.5-t roof-collapse block was in direct contact with the exposed archaeological surface onto which it fell. Because there was no sedimentation between the engraved surface and the archaeological layer upon which it collapsed, it is clear that the Early Aurignacian occupants of the shelter were the authors of the ceiling imagery. This discovery contributes an important dimension to our understanding of the earliest graphic representation in southwestern France, almost all of which was discovered before modern methods of archaeological excavation and analysis. Comparison of the dates for the Castanet ceiling and those directly obtained from the Chauvet paintings reveal that the “vulvar” representations from southwestern France are as old or older than the very different wall images from Chauvet.
Evolutionary Anthropology | 2016
Steven L. Kuhn; David A. Raichlen; Amy E. Clark
Movement is central to the survival of all free‐living organisms. Consequently, movement and what anthropologists often refer to as mobility, which is the sum of small‐scale movements tracked across larger geographic and temporal scales, are key targets of selection. Movement and mobility also underpin many of the key features that make us human and that allowed our lineage to adapt to changing environments across the globe. The most obvious example is the evolution of humans singular mode of locomotion. Bipedalism is arguably the most important derived anatomical trait of the hominin lineage. The mechanisms and circumstances that gave rise to this novel mode of movement remain subjects of intense research.
American Antiquity | 2013
Deanna N. Grimstead; Matthew Pailes; Katherine A. Dungan; David L. Dettman; Amy E. Clark
Archaeological marine shell artifacts moving over long distances may reveal the remnants of social networks, social currency, and the nuances of exchange. For the southwestern United States and northern Mexico, potential sources of marine shell are predominantly the Gulf of California and Pacific Ocean. There exists some taxonomic overlap between molluscan communities of these regions and the Gulf of California, necessitating non-biogeographic methods to distinguish their origins. Combined oxygen and carbon stable isotope ratio measurements demonstrate that modern shells from these water bodies have distinct isotopic ranges. Molluscan isotopic composition within the Gulf of California varies, which allows for the identification of distinct source regions. Archaeological marine shell from Pueblo III and IV sites in the Mogollon Rim region of east-central Arizona are sourced, demonstrating that archaeological shell was obtained from a northeastern subregion of the Gulf of California. This is the closest source for the Puebloan communities, but it is not consistent with previous hypotheses concerning the origin of marine shell in the Colorado Plateau and Mogollon Highlands, which suggested an exchange route via Paquime originating south of Isla Tiburon. We discuss the implications of these results in the context of previous research and draw conclusions about the meaning of shell use in the region.
Evolutionary Anthropology | 2016
Amy E. Clark
The spatial structure of archeological sites can help reconstruct the settlement dynamics of hunter‐gatherers by providing information on the number and length of occupations. This study seeks to access this information through a comparison of seven sites. These sites are open‐air and were all excavated over large spatial areas, up to 2,000 m2, and are therefore ideal for spatial analysis, which was done using two complementary methods, lithic refitting and density zones. Both methods were assessed statistically using confidence intervals. The statistically significant results from each site were then compiled to evaluate trends that occur across the seven sites. These results were used to assess the “spatial consistency” of each assemblage and, through that, the number and duration of occupations. This study demonstrates that spatial analysis can be a powerful tool in research on occupation dynamics and can help disentangle the many occupations that often make up an archeological assemblage.
Current Anthropology | 2017
Randall White; Romain Mensan; Amy E. Clark; Elise Tartar; Laurent Marquer; Raphaëlle Bourrillon; Paul Goldberg; Laurent Chiotti; Catherine Cretin; William Rendu; Anne Pike-Tay; Sarah Ranlett
We can trace the beginnings of our knowledge of early Upper Paleolithic (Aurignacian) use of fire to the pioneering 1910–1911 excavations at Abri Blanchard undertaken by Louis Didon and Marcel Castanet. At Blanchard, the excavators recognized and described fire structures that correspond in many ways to features excavated more recently in Western and Central Europe. Here, we address the issue of heat and light management in the early Upper Paleolithic, demonstrating a pattern that builds on these early excavations but that is refined through our recent field operations. Topics to be discussed include (1) recently excavated fire structures that suggest complex fire management and use, (2) the seemingly massive use of bone as fuel in most early Aurignacian sites, and (3) the anchoring of skin structures for purposes of heat retention with fireplaces behind animal-skin walls. Furthermore, new data on activities around fireplaces make it possible to infer social and organizational aspects of fire structures within Aurignacian living spaces. The vast majority of early Aurignacian occupations, most of them now dated to between 33,000 and 32,000 BP (uncalibrated), occurred on a previously unoccupied bedrock platform into which the occupants dug their fire features.
Journal of Anthropological Archaeology | 2015
Steven L. Kuhn; Amy E. Clark
Quaternary International | 2017
Raphaëlle Bourrillon; Randall White; Elise Tartar; Laurent Chiotti; Romain Mensan; Amy E. Clark; J.-C. Castel; Catherine Cretin; Thomas Higham; André Morala; Sarah Ranlett; Matthew Sisk; Thibaut Devièse; Daniel Comeskey
PALEO. Revue d'archéologie préhistorique | 2012
Romain Mensan; Raphaëlle Bourrillon; Catherine Cretin; Randall White; Philippe Gardère; Laurent Chiotti; Matthew Sisk; Amy E. Clark; Thomas Higham; Elise Tartar
Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory | 2018
Deanna N. Grimstead; Amy E. Clark; Adam Rezac