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Featured researches published by Jacob Harris.


Archive | 2013

Archaeological Reconnaissance for Middle Stone Age Sites Along the Pondoland Coast, South Africa

Erich C. Fisher; Rosa-Maria Albert; Greg Botha; Hayley C. Cawthra; Irene Esteban; Jacob Harris; Zenobia Jacobs; Antonieta Jerardino; Curtis W. Marean; Frank H. Neumann; Justin Pargeter; Melanie Poupart; Jan Venter

Part of the phytolith analysis was supported by the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion (HAR2010-15967 to Albert). The field survey was funded by a grant from the National Geographic Society / Waitt Foundation (W160-11 to Fisher)


American Journal of Human Biology | 2017

Physical activity patterns and biomarkers of cardiovascular disease risk in hunter‐gatherers

David A. Raichlen; Herman Pontzer; Jacob Harris; Audax Mabulla; Frank W. Marlowe; J. Josh Snodgrass; Geeta Eick; J. Colette Berbesque; Amelia Sancilio; Brian M. Wood

Time spent in moderate‐to‐vigorous physical activity (MVPA) is a strong predictor of cardiovascular health, yet few humans living in industrialized societies meet current recommendations (150 min/week). Researchers have long suggested that human physiological requirements for aerobic exercise reflect an evolutionary shift to a hunting and gathering foraging strategy, and a recent transition to more sedentary lifestyles likely represents a mismatch with our past in terms of physical activity. The goal of this study is to explore this mismatch by characterizing MVPA and cardiovascular health in the Hadza, a modern hunting and gathering population living in Northern Tanzania.


Journal of Human Evolution | 2017

The trajectory of bone surface modification studies in paleoanthropology and a new Bayesian solution to the identification controversy

Jacob Harris; Curtis W. Marean; Kiona Ogle; Jessica C. Thompson

A critical issue in human evolution is how to determine when hominins began incorporating significant amounts of meat into their diets. This fueled evolution of a larger brain and other adaptations widely considered unique to modern humans. Determination of the spatiotemporal context of this shift rests on accurate identification of fossil bone surface modifications (BSM), such as stone tool butchery marks. Multidecade-long debates over the agents responsible for individual BSM are indicative of systemic flaws in current approaches to identification. Here we review the current state of BSM studies and introduce a novel probabilistic approach to identifying agents of BSM. We use control assemblages of bones modified by modern agents to train a multivariate Bayesian probability model. The model then identifies BSM agents with associated uncertainties, serving as the basis for a predictive probabilistic algorithm. The multivariate Bayesian approach offers a novel, probabilistic, and analytical method for BSM research that overcomes much of the bias that has typified previous, more qualitative approaches.


PLOS ONE | 2016

New Experiments and a Model-Driven Approach for Interpreting Middle Stone Age Lithic Point Function Using the Edge Damage Distribution Method.

Benjamin J. Schoville; Kyle S. Brown; Jacob Harris; Jayne Wilkins

The Middle Stone Age (MSA) is associated with early evidence for symbolic material culture and complex technological innovations. However, one of the most visible aspects of MSA technologies are unretouched triangular stone points that appear in the archaeological record as early as 500,000 years ago in Africa and persist throughout the MSA. How these tools were being used and discarded across a changing Pleistocene landscape can provide insight into how MSA populations prioritized technological and foraging decisions. Creating inferential links between experimental and archaeological tool use helps to establish prehistoric tool function, but is complicated by the overlaying of post-depositional damage onto behaviorally worn tools. Taphonomic damage patterning can provide insight into site formation history, but may preclude behavioral interpretations of tool function. Here, multiple experimental processes that form edge damage on unretouched lithic points from taphonomic and behavioral processes are presented. These provide experimental distributions of wear on tool edges from known processes that are then quantitatively compared to the archaeological patterning of stone point edge damage from three MSA lithic assemblages—Kathu Pan 1, Pinnacle Point Cave 13B, and Die Kelders Cave 1. By using a model-fitting approach, the results presented here provide evidence for variable MSA behavioral strategies of stone point utilization on the landscape consistent with armature tips at KP1, and cutting tools at PP13B and DK1, as well as damage contributions from post-depositional sources across assemblages. This study provides a method with which landscape-scale questions of early modern human tool-use and site-use can be addressed.


Nature | 2018

Humans thrived in South Africa through the Toba eruption about 74,000 years ago

Eugene I. Smith; Zenobia Jacobs; Racheal Johnsen; Minghua Ren; Erich C. Fisher; Simen Oestmo; Jayne Wilkins; Jacob Harris; Panagiotis Karkanas; Shelby Fitch; Amber Ciravolo; Deborah L. Keenan; Naomi Cleghorn; Christine S. Lane; Thalassa Matthews; Curtis W. Marean

Approximately 74 thousand years ago (ka), the Toba caldera erupted in Sumatra. Since the magnitude of this eruption was first established, its effects on climate, environment and humans have been debated. Here we describe the discovery of microscopic glass shards characteristic of the Youngest Toba Tuff—ashfall from the Toba eruption—in two archaeological sites on the south coast of South Africa, a region in which there is evidence for early human behavioural complexity. An independently derived dating model supports a date of approximately 74 ka for the sediments containing the Youngest Toba Tuff glass shards. By defining the input of shards at both sites, which are located nine kilometres apart, we are able to establish a close temporal correlation between them. Our high-resolution excavation and sampling technique enable exact comparisons between the input of Youngest Toba Tuff glass shards and the evidence for human occupation. Humans in this region thrived through the Toba event and the ensuing full glacial conditions, perhaps as a combined result of the uniquely rich resource base of the region and fully evolved modern human adaptation.


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2015

Technical considerations and methodology for creating high-resolution, color-corrected, and georectified photomosaics of stratigraphic sections at archaeological sites

Erich C. Fisher; Derya Akkaynak; Jacob Harris; Andy I.R. Herries; Zenobia Jacobs; Panagiotis Karkanas; Curtis W. Marean; James R. McGrath


Journal of Archaeological Science | 2018

Differentiating between cutting actions on bone using 3D geometric morphometrics and Bayesian analyses with implications to human evolution

Erik Otárola-Castillo; Melissa G. Torquato; Hannah C. Hawkins; Emma James; Jacob Harris; Curtis W. Marean; Shannon P. McPherron; Jessica C. Thompson


The 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2018

Employing Bayesian Probability Theory to Diverse Applications Relevant to Archaeology

Jacob Harris; Curtis W. Marean; Kiona Ogle; Jessica C. Thompson


The 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology | 2018

Using Surface Roughness to Identify Heat Treatment in Lithic Technology

John Murray; Jacob Harris; Simen Oestmo; Curtis W. Marean


The 86th Annual Meeting of the American Association of Physical Anthropologists, New Orleans | 2017

Objectively measured physical activity in a hunting and gathering population

David A. Raichlen; Herman Pontzer; Jacob Harris; Theodore W. Zderic; Marc T. Hamilton; Brian M. Wood

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Herman Pontzer

University of Washington

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Zenobia Jacobs

University of Wollongong

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Simen Oestmo

Arizona State University

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Theodore W. Zderic

Pennington Biomedical Research Center

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