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Judi Lynn

(160,527 posts)
Mon May 25, 2015, 01:36 AM May 2015

The Caveman’s Home Was Not a Cave

The Caveman’s Home Was Not a Cave

Our picture of man’s early home has been skewed by modern preconceptions.
By Jude Isabella
May 21, 2015

It was the 18th-century scientist Carolus Linnaeus that laid the foundations for modern biological taxonomy. It was also Linnaeus who argued for the existence of Homo troglodytes, a primitive people said to inhabit the caves of an Indonesian archipelago. Although troglodyte1 has since been proven to be an invalid taxon, archaeological doctrine continued to describe our ancestors as cavemen. The idea fits with a particular narrative of human evolution, one that describes a steady march from the primitive to the complex: Humans descended from the trees, stumbled about the land, made homes in caves, and finally found glory in high-rises. In this narrative, progress includes living inside confined physical spaces. This thinking was especially prevalent in Western Europe, where caves yielded so much in the way of art and artifacts that archaeologists became convinced that a cave was also a home, in the modern sense of the word.

By the 1980s, archaeologists understood that this picture was incomplete: The cave was far from being the primary residence. But archaeologists continued focusing on excavating caves, both because it was habitual and the techniques involved were well understood.

Then along came the American anthropological archaeologist, Margaret Conkey. Today a professor emerita at the University of California, Berkeley, she had asked a simple question: What did cave people do all day? What if she looked at the archaeological record from the perspective of a mobile culture, like the Inuit? She decided to look outside of caves.

For the past 20 years, Conkey and her team have been conducting open-air field research in the Ariège region, in the Central Pyrénées foothills of France. Her project, titled “Between the Caves,” concentrated on the Paleolithic era, also known as the Stone Age, before humans became sedentary. Challenging the status quo, she found that the Paleolithic people were much more than cavemen.

More:
http://nautil.us/issue/24/error/the-cavemans-home-was-not-a-cave-rp?utm_source=RSS_Feed&utm_medium=RSS&utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication

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The Caveman’s Home Was Not a Cave (Original Post) Judi Lynn May 2015 OP
Per earlier art:There are caves in Italy that have been constantly inhabited until about 1980 kickysnana May 2015 #1

kickysnana

(3,908 posts)
1. Per earlier art:There are caves in Italy that have been constantly inhabited until about 1980
Mon May 25, 2015, 02:16 AM
May 2015

They are undergoing a renewed revival. Originally in Discover Magazine or Smithsonian.

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