Window on Humanity A Concise Introduction to Anthropology
Eighth Edition
Conrad Phillip Kottak University of Michigan
To my wife, Isabel Wagley Kottak
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Brief Contents Anthropology Today Boxes xiii Preface xiv Acknowledgments xxv About the Author xxvii 1 What Is Anthropology? 1 2 Culture 19 3 Doing Anthropology 41 4 Evolution, Genetics,
and Human Variation 67 5 The Primates 96 6 Early Hominins 121 7 The Genus Homo 143 8 The First Farmers 173 9 The First Cities and States 197 10 Language and
Communication 222 11 Making a Living 248
12 Political Systems 275 13 Families, Kinship,
and Marriage 301 14 Gender 328 15 Religion 352 16 Ethnicity and Race 379 17 Applying Anthropology 406 18 The World System,
Colonialism, and Inequality 430
19 Anthropology’s Role in a Globalizing World 456
GLOSSARY G1 BIBLIOGRAPHY B1 INDEX I1
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Contents Anthropology Today Boxes xiii Preface xiv Acknowledgments xxv About the Author xxvii
Chapter 1 What Is Anthropology? 1 The Cross-Cultural Perspective 1 Human Adaptability 2
Adaptation, Variation, and Change 3 Cultural Forces Shape Human Biology 4
General Anthropology 6 The Subdisciplines of Anthropology 7
Cultural Anthropology 7 Anthropological Archaeology 8 Biological Anthropology 10 Linguistic Anthropology 11
Applied Anthropology 11 Anthropology and Other Academic
Fields 13 A Humanistic Science 13 Cultural Anthropology
and Sociology 14 Anthropology Today: School of Hope 15 Summary 17
Chapter 2 Culture 19 What Is Culture? 19
Culture Is Learned 20 Culture Is Symbolic 20 Culture Is Shared 21 Culture and Nature 22 Culture Is All-Encompassing
and Integrated 22 Culture Is Instrumental, Adaptive,
and Maladaptive 23
Culture’s Evolutionary Basis 25 What We Share with Other Primates 25 How We Differ from Other Primates 27
Universality, Generality, and Particularity 28 Universals and Generalities 28 Particularity: Patterns of Culture 29
Culture and the Individual 30 Levels of Culture 31 Ethnocentrism, Cultural Relativism, and
Human Rights 32 Mechanisms of Cultural Change 34 Globalization 35 Anthropology Today: Preserving Cultural
Heritage 36 Summary 38
Chapter 3 Doing Anthropology 41 What Do Anthropologists Do? 41 Research Methods in Archaeology
and Biological Anthropology 42 Multidisciplinary Approaches 43 Studying the Past 44 Survey and Excavation 44
Kinds of Archaeology 45 Dating the Past 46
Relative Dating 46 Absolute Dating 47 Molecular Anthropology 48
Kinds of Biological Anthropology 49 Bone Biology 49 Anthropometry 49 Primatology 50
Research Methods in Cultural Anthropology 50
Ethnography: Anthropology’s Distinctive Strategy 50 Observation and Participant
Observation 51
Contents vii
Conversation, Interviewing, and Interview Schedules 52
The Genealogical Method 54 Key Cultural Consultants 54 Life Histories 54 Local Beliefs and Perceptions,
and the Ethnographer’s 55 Problem-Oriented Ethnography 56 Longitudinal Studies, Team Research,
and Multisited Ethnography 56 Survey Research 58 Doing Anthropology Right and Wrong:
Ethical Issues 59 Ownership Issues 60 The Code of Ethics 61 Anthropologists and the Military 62
Anthropology Today: Biology, Culture, and Grandparents 63
Summary 64
Chapter 4 Evolution, Genetics, and Human Variation 67 Evolution 67
Natural History before Darwin 68 Evolution: Theory and Fact 69
Genetics 71 Mendel’s Experiments 72 Independent Assortment 74
Population Genetics and Mechanisms of Genetic Evolution 74 Natural Selection 75 Mutation 77 Random Genetic Drift 78 Gene Flow 79
Race: A Discredited Concept in Biology 80 Races Are Not Biologically Distinct 82 Genetic Markers Don’t Correlate
with Phenotype 83 Human Biological Adaptation 84
Explaining Skin Color 84 Genes and Disease 88 Lactose Tolerance 91
Anthropology Today: Disease Evolution: A Case Study 92
Summary 93
Chapter 5 The Primates 96 Our Place among Primates 96 Homologies and Analogies 99 Primate Adaptations 100 The Primate Suborders 102 Monkeys 102
New World Monkeys 103 Old World Monkeys 104
Apes 105 Gibbons 105 Orangutans 106 Gorillas 107 Chimpanzees 109 Bonobos 110
Endangered Primates 111 Primate Evolution 111 Chronology 112 Early Primates 113
Early Cenozoic Primates 114 Oligocene Proto-Monkeys 114
Miocene Hominoids 115 Anthropology Today: Should Apes Have
Human Rights? 117 Pierolapithecus catalaunicus 118
Summary 119
Chapter 6 Early Hominins 121 What Makes Us Human? 121
Bipedalism 121 Brains, Skulls, and Childhood
Dependency 122 Tools 123 Teeth 123
Chronology of Hominin Evolution 123 Who Were the Earliest Hominins? 124
Sahelanthropus tchadensis 124 Orrorin tugenensis 126 Ardipithecus 127
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The Varied Australopiths 129 Australopithecus anamensis 129 Australopithecus afarensis 131 Gracile and Robust Australopiths 135
Early Stone Tools 137 Surprisingly Early Stone Tools 137 Oldowan Hominins at the
Kanjera Site 139 Anthropology Today: Au. sediba: Ancestor
or Fascinating Sideline? 140 Summary 141
Chapter 7 The Genus Homo 143 Early Homo 143
2015 Discoveries 143 H. rudolfensis 144 H. habilis and H. erectus 146
Out of Africa I: H. erectus 149 Acheulean Tools 149 Adaptive Strategies of H. erectus 150 The Evolution and Expansion of
H. erectus 150 Middle Pleistocene Hominins 153
Ice Ages of the Pleistocene 153 H. heidelbergensis 153
The Neandertals 155 Cold-Adapted Neandertals 156 The Neandertals and Modern People 156
The Denisovans 158 Homo floresiensis 159 Modern Humans 160
Out of Africa: AMH Edition 160 “Mitochrondrial Eve” and the Spread
of AMHs 161 AMHs on the Move 162
The Advent of Behavioral Modernity 163
Advances in Technology 166 Glacial Retreat 167 Settling the Americas 167 Anthropology Today: The Rising Stars
of a South African Cave 169 Summary 171
Chapter 8 The First Farmers 173 Broad-Spectrum Economies 173
The Mesolithic in Europe 173 Developments in Asia, Including
Early Pottery 174 The Neolithic 175 The First Farmers and Herders in the
Middle East 176 The Environmental Setting: A Vertical
Economy 177 Where and Why Did Food Production
Begin? 178 Genetic Changes and Domestication 179 The Coevolution of Farming and Property
Rights 180 Food Production and the State 181
Other Old World Farmers 182 The Neolithic in Africa 182 The Neolithic in Europe 183 The Neolithic in Asia 185
The First American Farmers 187 Key Aspects of Food Production
in the Americas 187 The Tropical Origins of New World
Domestication 188 Explaining the Neolithic 189 Costs and Benefits 191 Anthropology Today: Global Climate Change
and Other Threats to Archaeology 192 Summary 194
Chapter 9 The First Cities and States 197 State Formation 197
Regulation of Hydraulic Economies 198 Regional Trade 198 Population, War, and Circumscription 199
Attributes of States 200 State Formation in the Middle East 201
Urban Life 201 An Early Ritual Center 203 The Halafian and Ubaid Periods 204
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Social Ranking and Chiefdoms 205 The Rise of the State 207
Other Early States 210 State Formation in Mesoamerica 212
Early Chiefdoms and Elites 213 Warfare and State Formation:
The Zapotec Case 214 States in the Valley of Mexico 215
Why States Collapse 217 The Decline of the Maya 217
Anthropology Today: The Fantastic Claims of Pseudo-Archaeology 218
Summary 220
Chapter 10 Language and Communication 222 Language 222 Nonhuman Primate
Communication 223 Call Systems 223 Sign Language 223 The Origin of Language 226
Nonverbal Communication 226 Kinesics 226 Personal Space and Displays
of Affection 227 The Structure of Language 228 Language, Thought, and Culture 230
The Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis 231 Focal Vocabulary 231
Sociolinguistics 233 Social and Linguistic Variation 233 The Language of Food 234 Linguistic Diversity within
Nations 235 Linguistic Diversity in California 237 Gender Speech Contrasts 237 Stratification and Symbolic
Domination 238 African American Vernacular English
(AAVE) 239 Historical Linguistics 240
Language, Culture, and History 243 Language Loss 243
Anthropology Today: Words of the Year 244 Summary 245
Chapter 11 Making a Living 248 Adaptive Strategies 248 Foraging 249
Geographic Distribution of Foragers 250 Correlates of Foraging 252
Adaptive Strategies Based on Food Production 253 Horticulture 253 Agriculture 254 The Cultivation Continuum 256 Agricultural Intensification: People
and the Environment 256 Pastoralism 257
Economic Systems 259 Organization of Production in
Nonindustrial Societies 260 Means of Production 260 Alienation in Industrial Economies 261
Economizing and Maximization 263 Alternative Ends 264
Distribution, Exchange 265 The Market Principle 265 Redistribution 265 Reciprocity 266 Coexistence of Exchange Principles 267 Potlatching 268
Anthropology Today: Scarcity and the Betsileo 270
Summary 273
Chapter 12 Political Systems 275 What Is “The Political”? 275 Types and Trends 276 Bands and Tribes 277
Foraging Bands 278 Tribal Cultivators 280 The Village Head 280 The “Big Man” 282 Pantribal Sodalities 283 Nomadic Politics 285
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Chiefdoms 286 Political and Economic Systems 286 Status Systems 287 The Emergence of Stratification 288
State Systems 289 Population Control 290 Judiciary 290 Enforcement 290 Fiscal Support 291
Social Control 292 Hegemony and Resistance 292 Weapons of the Weak 293 Shame and Gossip 294 The Igbo Women’s War 295
Anthropology Today: The Illegality Industry: A Failed System of Border Control 296
Summary 298
Chapter 13 Families, Kinship, and Marriage 301 How Anthropologists View Families
and Kinship 301 Families 302
Nuclear and Extended Families 302 Industrialism and Family
Organization 304 Changes in North American Kinship 305 The Family among Foragers 307
Descent 307 Attributes of Descent Groups 308 Lineages, Clans, and Residence Rules 310
Defining Marriage 310 Exogamy and Incest 312 Incest and Its Avoidance 313 Endogamy 314 Same-Sex Marriage 315 Marriage: A Group Affair 316
Gifts at Marriage 317 Durable Alliances 318
Divorce 319 Plural Marriages 320
Polygyny 320 Polyandry 322
The Online Marriage Market 322 Anthropology Today: What Anthropologists
Could Teach the Supreme Court about the Definition of Marriage 324
Summary 325
Chapter 14 Gender 328 Sex and Gender 328 Recurrent Gender Patterns 330 Gender Roles and Gender
Stratification 333 Reduced Gender Stratification:
Matrilineal–Matrilocal Societies 333 Matriarchy 334 Increased Gender Stratification:
Patrilineal–Patrilocal Societies 335 Patriarchy and Violence 336
Gender in Industrial Societies 337 Changes in Gendered Work 338 Work and Family: Reality and
Stereotypes 340 The Feminization of Poverty 341 Work and Happiness 342
Beyond Male and Female 343 Sexual Orientation 346 Anthropology Today: Gender, Ethnicity,
and a Gold Medal for Fiji 348 Summary 350
Chapter 15 Religion 352 What Is Religion? 352 Expressions of Religion 354
Spiritual Beings 354 Powers and Forces 355 Magic and Religion 356 Uncertainty, Anxiety, Solace 356 Rituals 356 Rites of Passage 357 Totemism 360
Social Control 360 Kinds of Religion 362
Contents xi
Protestant Values and Capitalism 363 World Religions 363 Religion and Change 365
Revitalization Movements and Cargo Cults 365
New and Alternative Religious Movements 366
Religion and Cultural Globalization 367 Evangelical Protestantism and
Pentecostalism 367 Homogenization, Indigenization,
or Hybridization? 369 The Spread of Islam 370 Antimodernism and Fundamentalism 371 Religious Radicalization Today 372
Secular Rituals 373 Anthropology Today: Newtime Religion 374 Summary 376
Chapter 16 Ethnicity and Race 379 Ethnic Groups and Ethnicity 379
Status and Identity 380 Minority Groups and Stratification 382
Race and Ethnicity 382 The Social Construction of Race 383
Hypodescent: Race in the United States 383
Race in the Census 384 Not Us: Race in Japan 386 Phenotype and Fluidity: Race in Brazil 388
Ethnic Groups, Nations, and Nationalities 391 Ethnic Diversity by Region 391 Nationalities without Nations 392
Ethnic Tolerance and Accommodation 392 Assimilation 393 The Plural Society 393 Multiculturalism 393
Changing Demographics in the United States 394 The Gray and the Brown 395 The Backlash to Multiculturalism 396
Ethnic Conflict 397 Sectarian Violence 398 Prejudice and Discrimination 399 Black Lives Matter 400 Anti-Ethnic Discrimination 401
Anthropology Today: Why Are the Greens So White? Race and Ethnicity in Golf 402
Summary 404
Chapter 17 Applying Anthropology 406 What is Applied Anthropology? 406 The Role of the Applied
Anthropologist 407 Early Applications 407 Academic and Applied Anthropology 408 Applied Anthropology Today 409
Development Anthropology 410 Equity 410 Negative Equity Impact 410
Strategies for Innovation 412 Overinnovation 412 Indigenous Models 413
Anthropology and Education 414 Urban Anthropology 415 Medical Anthropology 417
Disease Theory Systems 418 Scientific Medicine versus Western
Medicine 419 Industrialization, Globalization,
and Health 420 Anthropology and Business 422 Public and Applied Anthropology 424 Careers and Anthropology 425 Anthropology Today: Culturally Appropriate
Marketing 426 Summary 428
Chapter 18 The World System, Colonialism, and Inequality 430 The World System 430
World-System Theory 431 The Emergence of the World System 432
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Industrialization 433 Causes of the Industrial Revolution 434 Socioeconomic Changes Associated with
the Industrial Revolution 435 Industrial Stratification 435
The Persistence of Inequality 436 Wealth Distribution in the
United States 436 Environmental Risks on the American
Periphery 438 Colonialism and Imperialism 440
The First Phase of European Colonialism: Spain and Portugal 440
Commercial Expansion and European Imperialism 441
The British Colonial Empire 441 French Colonialism 442 Colonialism and Identity 444 Postcolonial Studies 444
Development 445 Neoliberalism 445 Neoliberalism and NAFTA’s Economic
Refugees 446 Communism, Socialism, and
Postsocialism 449 Communism 449 Postsocialist Transitions 449
The World System Today 450 Anthropology Today: Mining Giant Compatible
with Sustainability Institute? 452 Summary 454
Chapter 19 Anthropology’s Role in a Globalizing World 456 Globalization: Its Meaning and
Its Nature 456 Our Global Economy 457 Energy Consumption and Industrial
Degradation 458 Global Climate Change 459 Environmental Anthropology 462
Global Assaults on Local Autonomy 462 Deforestation 463 Emerging Diseases 465
Interethnic Contact 466 Cultural Imperialism and
Indigenization 467 A Global System of Images 469 A Global Culture of Consumption 469
People in Motion 470 Indigenous Peoples 472 Anthropology’s Lessons 473 Anthropology Today: Diversity under Siege:
Global Forces and Indigenous Peoples 474 Summary 476
Glossary G1 Bibliography B1 Index I1
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Anthropology Today Boxes
School of Hope 15 Preserving Cultural Heritage 36 Biology, Culture, and Grandparents 63 Disease Evolution: A Case Study 92 Should Apes Have Human Rights? 117 Au. sediba: Ancestor or Fascinating
Sideline? 140 The Rising Stars of a South
African Cave 169 Global Climate Change and Other
Threats to Archaeology 192 The Fantastic Claims of Pseudo-
Archaeology 218 Words of the Year 244 Scarcity and the Betsileo 270
The Illegality Industry: A Failed System of Border Control 296
What Anthropologists Could Teach the Supreme Court about the Definition of Marriage 324
Gender, Ethnicity, and a Gold Medal for Fiji 348
Newtime Religion 374 Why Are the Greens So White? Race
and Ethnicity in Golf 402 Culturally Appropriate Marketing 426 Mining Giant Compatible with
Sustainability Institute? 452 Diversity under Siege: Global Forces and
Indigenous Peoples 474
Window on Humanity is intended to provide a concise, readable, introduction to general (four-field) anthropology. The shorter length increases the instructor’s options for as- signing additional reading—case studies, readers, and other supplements—in a semes- ter course. Window also can work well in a quarter system, for which traditional texts may be too long. Just as anthropology is a dynamic discipline that encourages new discoveries and explores the profound changes now affecting people and societies, this edition of Window on Humanity makes a concerted effort to keep pace with changes in the way students read and learn core content today. Our digital program, Connect Anthro- pology, includes assignable and assessable quizzes, exercises, and interactive activi- ties, organized around course-specific learning objectives. Furthermore, Connect includes an adaptive testing program in LearnSmart, as well as SmartBook, the first and only truly adaptive reading experience. The tools and resources provided in Connect Anthropology are designed to engage students and enable them to improve their performance in the course. This 8th edition has benefited from feedback from over 2,000 students who worked with these tools and programs while using the 7th edition of Window or one of my other recent texts. We were able to respond to specific areas of difficulty that students encountered, chapter by chapter. I used this extensive feedback to revise, rethink, and clarify my writing in almost every chapter. In preparing this edition, I benefited tremendously from both students’ and profes- sors’ reactions to my book. As I work on each new edition, it becomes ever more apparent to me that while any competent and useful text must present anthropology’s core, that text also must demon- strate anthropology’s relevance to the 21st-century world we inhabit. Accordingly, each new edition contains substantial content changes as well as specific features relevant to our changing world. One of my primary goals is to help students make connections between what they read and their own lives. Accordingly, the “Anthropology Today” boxes placed near the end of each chapter examine recent developments in anthropol- ogy as well as contemporary topics and issues that are clearly related to anthropology’s subject matter. I have written ten new “Anthropology Today” boxes highlighting impor- tant recent fossil finds as well as recent world events and issues in the news. Each chap- ter also contains a new feature that I call “Think Like an Anthropologist,” which attempts to get students to do just that—to apply their critical thinking skills as an an- thropologist might. I realize that most students who read this book will not go on to become anthropologists, or even anthropology majors. For those who do, this book should provide a solid foundation to build on. For those who don’t—that is, for most of my readers—my goal is to instill a sense of understanding and appreciation of human diversity and of anthropology as a field. May this course and this text help students think differently about, and achieve greater understanding of, their own culture and its place within our globalizing world.
Preface
Preface xv
Updates and Revisions—Informed by Student Data
Revisions to this 8th edition of Window on Humanity were extensively informed by student data, collected anonymously by McGraw-Hill’s LearnSmart adaptive learning system. Using this data, we were able to identify content areas with which students struggle. I relied on this data, which provided feedback at the paragraph and even sen- tence level (see the screen capture below), in making decisions about material to revise, update, and improve.
McGraw-Hill Connect Anthropology
Connect Anthropology is a premier digital teaching and learning tool that allows instructors to assign and assess course material. Connect Anthropology includes assignable and assessable quizzes, exercises, and interactive activities, organized around course-specific learning objectives. New to this edition, NewsFlash activities bring in articles on current events relevant to anthropology with accompanying assessment. In addition, Connect Anthropology includes LearnSmart, an adaptive testing program, and SmartBook, the first and only adaptive reading experience. The system is praised by users—faculty and students alike—for helping to make both teaching and learning more efficient, saving time and keeping class time and inde- pendent study time focused on what is most important and only those things that still need reinforcing, and shifting the teaching/learning process away from memorization and cramming. The result is better grades, better concept retention, more students staying in class and passing, and less time spent preparing classes or studying for tests.
SmartBook: SmartBook makes study time as productive and efficient as possible. It identifies and closes knowledge gaps through a continually adapting reading experience that provides personalized learning resources at the precise moment of need. This ensures that every minute spent with SmartBook is returned to the student as the most value-added minute possible. The result? More confidence, better grades, and greater success.
xvi Preface
Connect Insight: Connect Insight is Connect’s one-of-a-kind visual analytics dashboard—available for both instructors and
students—that provides at-a-glance information regarding student performance, which is immediately actionable. By presenting assignment, assessment, and topical perfor- mance results together with a time metric that is easily visible for aggregate or individ- ual results, Connect Insight gives the user the ability to take a just-in-time approach to teaching and learning.
Chapter-by-Chapter Changes
Updates were also informed by the many excellent reviews provided by faculty at 2- and 4-year schools across the country. In addition to the new “Think Like an Anthropologist” feature, as well as revisions and updates in nearly every section of the book, the follow- ing are this edition’s major changes: Chapter 1: What Is Anthropology? ∙ “The Subdivisions of Anthropology” features a thoroughly revised sub-section on
“Biological Anthropology.”
Preface xvii
∙ The “Anthropology and Other Academic Fields” section has been fully revised and includes a new sub-section on “Cultural Anthropology and Sociology.”
∙ A new “Anthropology Today” box, “School of Hope,” has been added.
Chapter 2: Culture ∙ The opening section, “What Is Culture?,” has been fully revised, with a new intro-
duction differentiating more clearly between society and culture, as well as new definitions of enculturation and popular culture.
∙ The “Mechanisms of Cultural Change” section includes a new discussion of pidgin languages.
∙ A new “Anthropology Today” box, “Preserving Cultural Heritage,” has been added.
Chapter 3: Doing Anthropology ∙ The “Dating the Past” section includes a fully revised section on “Molecular
Anthropology.” ∙ The “Ethnography: Anthropology’s Distinctive Strategy” section (formerly
“ Ethnographic Techniques”) features a new introduction with a clarified definition of ethnography, as well as a fully revised and expanded sub-section on “Problem- Oriented Ethnography.”
∙ The “Doing Anthropology Right and Wrong: Ethical Issues” section includes a revised discussion of “Ownership Issues,” with updated discussion of the “ Kennewick Man” bones and their return to the Colville reservation in 2016.
Chapter 4: Evolution, Genetics, and Human Variation ∙ The “Evolution” section (previously “The Origin of Species”) features a new
introduction and an expanded and reworked sub-section, “Evolution: Theory and Fact.” ∙ The “Population Genetics and Mechanisms of Genetic Evolution” section (formerly
“Mechanisms of Genetic Evolution”) features a new introduction and expanded and revised sub-sections, “Mutation” and “Random Genetic Drift.”
∙ The “Race: A Discredited Concept” section features clarified discussions on “Races Are Not Biologically Distinct” and “Genetic Markers Don’t Correlate with Phenotype.”
∙ The “Human Biological Adaptation” section includes a new introduction, a new sub-section “Explaining Skin Color,” and a rewritten sub-section, “Genes and Disease.”
∙ A new “Anthropology Today” box, “Disease Evolution: A Case Study,” has been added.
Chapter 5: The Primates ∙ The “Our Place Among the Primates” section features a new introduction and
includes updated taxonomic categories. ∙ The “Primate Adaptations” section (formerly “Primate Tendencies”) has been
reworked and expanded to include discussion of sensory shifts. ∙ “The Primate Suborders” section (formerly “Prosimians”) has been rewritten and
expanded to incorporate discussion of the split between haplorrhines and strepsirrhines.
∙ The “Monkeys” section and “Orangutans” sub-sections have been reworked.
xviii Preface
∙ The “Early Primates” section has been extensively revised and expanded to include discussion of the spread of angiosperms (flowering plants) during the Cenozoic era, and evolutionary splits in the early primate groups.
∙ The “Miocene Hominoids” section has been revised.
Chapter 6: Early Hominins ∙ The discussion throughout the chapter has been revised to reflect contemporary
consensus on terminology (Paranthropus rather than Australopithecus robustus and Au. boisei; “australopith” rather than “australopithecine”).
∙ The “Who Were the Earliest Hominins?” section has been extensively revised to include the most recent findings.
∙ “The Varied Australopiths” section has been thoroughly revised to include new data and measurements, and expanded discussion of anatomical features.
∙ The “Early Stone Tools” section (previously “Oldowan Tools”) has been extensively revised and expanded to incorporate recent archaeological discoveries.
Chapter 7: The Genus Homo ∙ The “Early Homo” section features a new introduction, a brand new sub-section,
“2015 Discoveries,”and extensively revised sub-sections on “H. rudolfensis” and “H. habilis and H. erectus.”
∙ The “Middle Pleistocene Hominins” section (formerly “Archaic H. Sapiens”) has been revised to incorporate clearer terminology and a much expanded discussion of “H. heidelbergensis.”
∙ “The Neandertals” section has been revised and expanded to incorporate more coverage of Neandertal DNA.
∙ A new “Anthropology Today” box, “The Rising Stars of a South African Cave,” highlights the recent Homo naledi discoveries.
Chapter 8: The First Farmers ∙ A new major subhead, “Broad-Spectrum Economies,” features a new introduction
and reworked sub-sections, “The Mesolithic in Europe” and “Developments in Asia, Including Early Pottery.”
∙ “The First Farmers and Herders in the Middle East” section includes a new sub- section, “The Coevolution of Farming and Property Rights,” as well as an expanded sub-section on “Where and Why Did Food Production Begin?,” with new discussion about the productivity of early farmers.
∙ The “Other Old World Farmers” section includes heavily revised sub-sections on “The Neolithic in Africa” (with expanded discussion of Nabta Playa), “The Neolithic in Europe” (with new discussion of DNA changes), and “The Neolithic in Asia” (with new material on Southern Chinese farming).
∙ “The First American Farmers” section has been revised and expanded to include Piperno’s experiments growing teosinte under prehistoric conditions.
∙ The “Costs and Benefits” section includes new coverage of the public health, income inequality, and environmental costs of food production.
Preface xix
Chapter 9: The First Cities and States ∙ The “State Formation” section (previously “The Origin of the State”) has been
extensively revised and includes a new introduction clarifying the difference between chiefdoms and states.
∙ The “State Formation in the Middle East” section has been fully revised and includes a new sub-section “An Early Ritual Center” (which discusses the important early site of Göbekli Tepe in southeastern Turkey) and a rewritten and clarified sub-section “Social Ranking and Chiefdom.”
∙ The “State Formation in Mesoamerica” section has been heavily revised and in- cludes new material on trade between the Olmec and Oaxaca regions and warfare in the Zapotec state.
Chapter 10: Language and Communication ∙ The “Nonverbal Communication” section includes a new sub-section, “Personal
Space and Displays of Affection” (adapted from the previous edition’s Chapter 2 “Anthropology Today” box).