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Human Ecology

Biocultural Adaptations in Human Communities

  • Book
  • © 2006

Overview

  • Identifies culture as a key ecological variable in human ecosystems.
  • Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Part of the book series: Ecological Studies (ECOLSTUD, volume 182)

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Table of contents (6 chapters)

Keywords

Reviews

From the reviews:

"This volume provides a detailed and thorough synthesis of the literature regarding the interplay between human populations and the characteristics and properties of their local environments, both physical and cultural. … The volume is to be commended for its breadth and depth of detail and debate, and the publishers are to be congratulated for the inclusion of such a good quality and explicitly human volume within a broader ecological studies series." (Sonia R. Zakrzewski, Economics & Human Biology, Vol. 5 (2), 2007)

"Holger Schutkowski’s important biocultural synthesis explores the duality between cultural strategies of human resource use and their biological ramifications in both past and present contexts. Indeed, Schutkowski’s synthesis succeeds on a number of fronts and is an important contribution that students of human ecology and archaeology will no doubt heed for years to come. … The book explores a wide diversity of case studies within a theoretical systems-based framework." (John Krigbaum, Journal of Archaeological Science, Vol. 35, 2008)

Authors and Affiliations

  • Biological Anthropology Research Centre, Department of Archaeological Sciences, University of Bradford, Bradford, UK

    Holger Schutkowski

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