Deck 13: Early Holocene Hunters and Gatherers

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Question
Which of the following is NOT evidence that supports the Bering Land Bridge model for the peopling of the New World? A. the age estimates for the earliest humans in North and South America
B) close geographic proximity of northeastern Asia and northwestern North America
C) presence of the Beringia 'land bridge; during the late Pleistocene
D) the documented Pleistocene migration of animals along this route
E) the linguistic and genetic similarities of Asian and Native American populations

A) the age estimates for the earliest humans in North and South America
B) close geographic proximity of northeastern Asia and northwestern North America
C) presence of the Beringia 'land bridge; during the late Pleistocene
D) the documented Pleistocene migration of animals along this route
E) the linguistic and genetic similarities of Asian and Native American populations
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Question
Which of the following presents the primary challenge that the Bering Land Bridge represented the first route for the first humans in the New World?

A) the earliest occupations pre-date the presence of Beringia
B) many early occupations pre-date the presence of the Ice Free Corridor
C) there are no Upper Paleolithic sites in northern Asia at the time of first settlement
D) modern Native Americans are genetically unrelated to northern Asian populations
E) the technologically simplest way to enter is not on foot
Question
Which of the following factors is NOT used to support the Pacific Coastal Route model?

A) the colonization of Australia by 40,000 ya.
B) the presence of early coastal sites in South America
C) the demonstrated presence of marine-adapted human populations in northeastern Asia
D) the relative lack of interior sites in North America
E) the technological capabilities of Late Pleistocene populations
Question
Which of the following best describes the nature of Upper Paleolithic occupations in the New World?

A) There are no documented occupations that coincide with the presence of Beringia.
B) People were adapted to high-latitude conditions as early as 50,000 ya.
C) The Upper Paleolithic peoples from northern Asia were culturally and geographically capable of entering the New World.
D) Colder climates and sparse resources existed in the coastal regions, compared to the interior.
E) The biological evidence of the earliest people are prolific.
Question
The earliest Americans are known to have arrived in the Americas no later than:

A) 45,000 ya.
B) 30,000 ya.
C) 20,000 ya.
D) 13,000 ya.
E) 8,000 ya.
Question
Which theory for the settlement of the New World relies on a passage using canoes, rafts, or forms of water transport?

A) North Atlantic Ice-Edge Corridor
B) Pacific Coastal Route
C) Bering Land Bridge
D) Australia Connection
E) Asian Land-Sea Bridge
Question
Which of the following conclusions have NOT been reached concerning variability in Native American mtDNA?

A) These populations were derived from a single northeastern Asian population.
B) There were 4-5 founding maternal lineages.
C) The populations were the result of multiple migrations starting 20,000 years ago.
D) The populations were the result of one migration ca. 20,000 years ago.
E) The physical traits shared by modern Native Americans are a produce of founder effect.
Question
Which of the following sites is NOT a candidate for the earliest occupation of the New World?

A) Meadowcroft Rockshelter
B) Pedra Furada
C) Monte Verde
D) Beringia
E) Cactus Hill
Question
Evidence used to support the contention that humans were primarily responsible for the Pleistocene extinctions include all of the following except

A) the timing of the arrival of humans in the New World within a few centuries of the extinction of large mammals
B) association between large herbivores and Paleo-Indian points
C) a similar pattern of extinction in Asia
D) large herbivores have been excavated from sites with the weapons used to kill them
E) overhunting by rapidly expanding human populations
Question
The Folsom and Plano cultures are primarily associated with use in hunting what type of animal?

A) deer
B) bison
C) mammoths
D) camelids
E) sloths
Question
The presence of morphological variability in skeletons from Asia and the Americas indicates that

A) there were likely multiple migrations to the New World
B) humans evolved independently in the Americas
C) there was significant genetic drift among New World populations
D) non-Asian populations are likely responsible for the earliest settlement
E) the Bering Land Bridge was not a route for the entrance of humans to the New World
Question
Which of the following best describes the physical characteristics of the earliest human skeletons from the Americas?

A) They closely resemble modern Native Americans.
B) They display generalized traits common among Ainu and Australian populations.
C) They represent a blend of Asian and European traits.
D) They resemble Upper Paleolithic European populations.
E) They do not show similarities with any other populations.
Question
Based on the cultural data, which of the following best describes the opinion of the majority of archaeologists regarding the origins of Native Americans?

A) Native American populations originated in Asia.
B) Native American populations are the result of multiple migrations from both Asia and Western Europe.
C) Native Americas only traveled along the Bering Land Bridge route.
D) It is unclear where the Native American populations originated.
E) Many Native American populations are likely the result of boat travel from Polynesia.
Question
Which of the following best describes the importance of the Monte Verde site?

A) It provides solid evidence for the Bering Land Bridge Theory.
B) It conclusively links the Solutrean and Clovis cultures.
C) It provides definitive evidence for pre-Clovis occupations.
D) It is indicative of marine dependence during the Paleo-Indian period.
E) It contains evidence for the earliest skeletons in the New World.
Question
Fluted point technology

A) is present at the Pre-Clovis site of Monte Verde
B) has clear precursors in northern Asia
C) has no clear Asian predecessors
D) is primarily associated with the Archaic period
E) is probably not an American invention
Question
The Holocene epoch is NOT defined as:

A) the most recent geological epoch
B) the geological period beginning around 11,000 ya.
C) a period of increased global temperatures
D) the geological period associated with the development of broadly based hunting and gathering
E) the period prior to the one in which we now live
Question
The dry land connection between Asia and America is associated with which proposed models for the entrance of people to the New World?

A) North Atlantic Ice-Edge Corridor
B) Pacific Coastal Route
C) Bering Land Bridge
D) Alaska Connector
E) Siberian Transit Corridor
Question
Paleo-Indian subsistence is best defined as

A) variable based on local environmental conditions
B) based mostly on marine resources
C) a uniform pattern of specialized megafauna exploitation
D) primarily associated with gathering nut and seed crops
E) focused almost exclusively on mammoths and mastodons
Question
The Paleo-Indian period is defined by what cultural feature?

A) microblade technology
B) fluted points
C) Venus figurines
D) intensive nut processing
E) canoe and raft technology
Question
Which model for the initial settlement is not dependent on the cycle of glacial and inter-glacial periods?

A) North Asian Corridor
B) Pacific Coastal Route
C) Bering Land Bridge
D) Australian Connection
E) Siberian Highway
Question
Between 12,000 and 11,000 ya, the climate associated with the waning Pleistocene changed, exemplified by

A) increase in temperature and decrease in precipitation.
B) decrease in temperature and decrease in precipitation.
C) increase in temperature and increase in precipitation.
D) decrease in temperature and increase in precipitation.
E) stabilization of earlier Pleistocene temperature and precipitation.
Question
Which of the following best describes the changes in subsistence practices of groups during the early and middle Holocene?

A) initial systematic exploitation of fish and fowl resources
B) primarily associated with hunting megafauna
C) intensive hunting, fishing, and gathering
D) a decreased emphasis on the importance of plant foods in the diet
E) a switch away from marine resources as sea levels rise
Question
Which of the following describes the primary difference between the diet of people in Northern and Western Europe and those in the Near East?

A) Diet in the Near East included more wild plant foods.
B) The European diet included more plant foods.
C) Diet in the Near East included more animal foods.
D) Coastal resources were much more important in the Near East.
E) Coastal resources were not exploited by European groups.
Question
Hunter-gatherers in Western North America, particularly the Great Basin, tended to focus on what environmental feature in addition to upland resources?

A) marshes
B) deciduous forests
C) coastal resources
D) bison herds
E) desert rodents
Question
Small groups who are highly mobile and typically move to seasonally available resources are known as:

A) collectors
B) foragers
C) hunter-gatherers
D) Mesolithic hunter-gatherers
E) seasonal extractors
Question
In what area of North America did highly organized sedentary communities develop based primarily on coastal resources and without domesticated crops?

A) eastern North America
B) Northwest Coast
C) California
D) Great Basin
E) the Southwest
Question
Groups with a subsistence strategy of relying on a wide range of locally available foods which are brought back to base camps are defined as:

A) collectors
B) foragers
C) seasonal extractors
D) residentially mobile
E) Paleo-Indians
Question
In what way did the climate changes at the end of the Pleistocene NOT affect technology?

A) boats became more common
B) implements for working wood became more prevalent
C) wood became increasingly important as a raw material
D) wooden dugout canoes were replaced by foot travel E. skin-covered boats aided in navigating streams and large bodies of water
Question
A pattern of seasonal settlement movements from one resource zone to another is known as:

A) sedentism
B) transhumance
C) foraging
D) subsistence
E) migration
Question
Which of the following constituted the primary plant resources utilized in prehistoric California?

A) pine nuts
B) chenopodium
C) acorns
D) squash
E) corn
Question
The term for collector-type hunter-gatherers from the Near East ca. 12,000 ya is

A) Capsian
B) Archaic
C) Paleo-Indian
D) Kebaran
E) Natufian
Question
Sites like Ohalo II demonstrate that some food-collecting communities experienced economic changes as long ago as the Last Glacial Maximum, which led to

A) The use of a small range of wild plants and no animals as food.
B) The use of a wide range of wild plants and no animals as food.
C) The use of a wide range of wild plants and animals as food.
D) The use of a small range of wild plants and animals as food.
E) The demise of human populations in the regions affected.
Question
The increase in human dental caries hypoplasias, periodontal disease and overall reduction in tooth size in Natufian skeletons can be attributed to

A) availability of fewer plant resources
B) diet based upon domesticated wild cattle
C) an abundance of animal meat in the diet
D) bows and arrows which allowed more successful hunting
E) predominace of starchy cereal grains in the diet
Question
What factor is associated with the shift away from big game hunting in the temperate latitudes?

A) the development of new technology which allowed them to more efficiently process other resources
B) climate changes which resulted in many former prey animals going extinct or becoming geographically unavailable
C) a decline in human population caused by the environmental shifts made big-game hunting difficult
D) human over-hunting reduced the populations
E) a smaller range of potentially edible species were exploited
Question
The site of Star Carr, near the North Sea coast, served as a seasonal

A) gathering place for shell fish
B) hunting camp
C) building site for mounds and earthworks
D) whale hunting site
E) shell midden
Question
Which of the following is best describes the current position on the role of humans in megafaunal extinctions?

A) Humans likely played only a small role in this event.
B) Humans and disease played an equal role in this event.
C) Human overhunting was the primary cause.
D) They were likely the result of an extreme period of cold at the end of the Ice Age.
E) Paleo-Indian groups hunted and collected one species of animals, leading to the extinction.
Question
The term used to describe the post-Pleistocene cultures in the Middle East is:

A) Upper Paleolithic
B) Mesolithic
C) Epipaleolithic
D) Archaic
E) Middle Paleolithic
Question
The highly organized communities of the Pacific Northwest prospered by relying on ritualized redistribution that ensured a wider availability of regionals resources. The communities were also practicing a way of living known as:

A) sedentism
B) domestication
C) foraging
D) transhumance
E) gathering
Question
The term used to describe the post-Pleistocene cultures in Europe is:

A) Upper Paleolithic
B) Mesolithic
C) Epipaleolithic
D) Archaic
E) Middle Paleolithic
Question
Eastern Archaic cultures of North America reinforced their claims to homelands by

A) engaging in the potlatch ceremony
B) laying out cemeteries for their dead or building earthwork mounds
C) building large sedentary coastal villages
D) including grave goods in every burial
E) hunting aurochs in abundance
Question
What evidence indicates that the Bering Land Bridge model cannot explain the entirety of the peopling of the New World?
Question
The Epipaleolithic of the Near East was more dependent on wild nut and seed crops than the Mesolithic in northern Europe.
Question
In many parts of North America, hunter-gatherer lifeways were less the collector than the forager type common among their Paleo-Indian ancestors.
Question
Evidence from the Upper Paleolithic in Asia shows that there is no evidence for occupation prior to the initial occupation of the New World.
Question
The Holocene epoch beings around 11,000 years ago.
Question
During the early and middle Holocene, many groups adopt an intensive hunting, fishing, and gathering lifestyle.
Question
What is the Holocene?
Question
Who was the Kennewick man? Why are the remains important for understanding the settlement of the New World?
Question
There is clear evidence implicating humans in the extinction of many species of New World animals at the end of the Pleistocene.
Question
Foragers are typically associated with large, sedentary villages and dense populations.
Question
The earliest skeletons from the New World show greater biological diversity than do modern Native Americans.
Question
An increase of average July temperature by perhaps 20 degrees Fahrenheit has meant much that we have yet to learn about Upper Paleolithic and Archaic/Mesolithic coastal adaptations lies buried under hundreds of feet of seawater off modern coastlines.
Question
What are three sites that provide evidence for the earliest occupation of the New World?
Question
How did early Holocene human subsistence patterns differ from those during the late Pleistocene?
Question
All of the alternative models to the Bering Land Bridge model require the use of watercraft.
Question
Describe the environmental changes that occurred at the end of the Pleistocene.
Question
What is the Paleo-Indian period? What cultural features define this time period?
Question
The Bering Land Bridge represents the technologically simplest point of entry to the New World.
Question
Paleoindians almost exclusively hunted megafauna.
Question
Compared with foragers, food collectors rely much more on a few seasonally abundant resources, and their camps often show evidence of specialized processing and storage technologies.
Question
Knowing when people arrived in the New World is necessarily tied with where they came, because the two tell us where to search in the archaeological record for the first immigrants. Why?
Question
Compare and contrast the Clovis, Folsom, Dalton and Plano Archaeological complexes and detail the importance of each to the lifestyles of the people who used them.
Question
How do foraging and food collecting compare and contrast as subsistence strategies? What are some implications for each with regard to other cultural consequences: group size, mobility, exchange, effect on natural species, etc.?
Question
If people traveled along the pacific coast beginning about 17,000-15,000 ya, when New World inhabitants were suspected as having come from Asia, climatic conditions would have been different than those in the interior. How?
Question
Discuss the possible role of humans in the Pleistocene extinctions.
Question
What are the different models used to explain the peopling of the New World. Discuss the evidence used to support or refute each model.
Question
Why is the settlement of the Americas a difficult issue for archaeologists to address? What aspects of this event as well as the approaches that archaeologists use to understand it inhibit our ability to more definitely address this issue?
Question
Discuss the physical evidence for the initial occupation of the New World.
Question
How do human cultural patterns change at the beginning of the Holocene? What is the role of the environment in this shift? Compare and contrast these developments in Europe, North America, and the Near East.
Question
What is the Paleo-Indian period? When does it date, and what are the associated cultural patterns? Illustrate your answer with examples from sites discussed in the text.
Question
What were some of the environmental changes occurring as a result of the end of the Younger Dryas?
Question
What are specific biological and cultural clues that point to Asian ancestry for the earliest American populations? Why are they controversial?
Question
Using Star Carr or another important site as an example, explain how specific archaeological findings may be used to interpret early Holocene lifeways.
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Deck 13: Early Holocene Hunters and Gatherers
1
Which of the following is NOT evidence that supports the Bering Land Bridge model for the peopling of the New World? A. the age estimates for the earliest humans in North and South America
B) close geographic proximity of northeastern Asia and northwestern North America
C) presence of the Beringia 'land bridge; during the late Pleistocene
D) the documented Pleistocene migration of animals along this route
E) the linguistic and genetic similarities of Asian and Native American populations

A) the age estimates for the earliest humans in North and South America
B) close geographic proximity of northeastern Asia and northwestern North America
C) presence of the Beringia 'land bridge; during the late Pleistocene
D) the documented Pleistocene migration of animals along this route
E) the linguistic and genetic similarities of Asian and Native American populations
A
2
Which of the following presents the primary challenge that the Bering Land Bridge represented the first route for the first humans in the New World?

A) the earliest occupations pre-date the presence of Beringia
B) many early occupations pre-date the presence of the Ice Free Corridor
C) there are no Upper Paleolithic sites in northern Asia at the time of first settlement
D) modern Native Americans are genetically unrelated to northern Asian populations
E) the technologically simplest way to enter is not on foot
B
3
Which of the following factors is NOT used to support the Pacific Coastal Route model?

A) the colonization of Australia by 40,000 ya.
B) the presence of early coastal sites in South America
C) the demonstrated presence of marine-adapted human populations in northeastern Asia
D) the relative lack of interior sites in North America
E) the technological capabilities of Late Pleistocene populations
C
4
Which of the following best describes the nature of Upper Paleolithic occupations in the New World?

A) There are no documented occupations that coincide with the presence of Beringia.
B) People were adapted to high-latitude conditions as early as 50,000 ya.
C) The Upper Paleolithic peoples from northern Asia were culturally and geographically capable of entering the New World.
D) Colder climates and sparse resources existed in the coastal regions, compared to the interior.
E) The biological evidence of the earliest people are prolific.
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5
The earliest Americans are known to have arrived in the Americas no later than:

A) 45,000 ya.
B) 30,000 ya.
C) 20,000 ya.
D) 13,000 ya.
E) 8,000 ya.
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6
Which theory for the settlement of the New World relies on a passage using canoes, rafts, or forms of water transport?

A) North Atlantic Ice-Edge Corridor
B) Pacific Coastal Route
C) Bering Land Bridge
D) Australia Connection
E) Asian Land-Sea Bridge
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Unlock for access to all 73 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which of the following conclusions have NOT been reached concerning variability in Native American mtDNA?

A) These populations were derived from a single northeastern Asian population.
B) There were 4-5 founding maternal lineages.
C) The populations were the result of multiple migrations starting 20,000 years ago.
D) The populations were the result of one migration ca. 20,000 years ago.
E) The physical traits shared by modern Native Americans are a produce of founder effect.
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8
Which of the following sites is NOT a candidate for the earliest occupation of the New World?

A) Meadowcroft Rockshelter
B) Pedra Furada
C) Monte Verde
D) Beringia
E) Cactus Hill
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9
Evidence used to support the contention that humans were primarily responsible for the Pleistocene extinctions include all of the following except

A) the timing of the arrival of humans in the New World within a few centuries of the extinction of large mammals
B) association between large herbivores and Paleo-Indian points
C) a similar pattern of extinction in Asia
D) large herbivores have been excavated from sites with the weapons used to kill them
E) overhunting by rapidly expanding human populations
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10
The Folsom and Plano cultures are primarily associated with use in hunting what type of animal?

A) deer
B) bison
C) mammoths
D) camelids
E) sloths
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k this deck
11
The presence of morphological variability in skeletons from Asia and the Americas indicates that

A) there were likely multiple migrations to the New World
B) humans evolved independently in the Americas
C) there was significant genetic drift among New World populations
D) non-Asian populations are likely responsible for the earliest settlement
E) the Bering Land Bridge was not a route for the entrance of humans to the New World
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k this deck
12
Which of the following best describes the physical characteristics of the earliest human skeletons from the Americas?

A) They closely resemble modern Native Americans.
B) They display generalized traits common among Ainu and Australian populations.
C) They represent a blend of Asian and European traits.
D) They resemble Upper Paleolithic European populations.
E) They do not show similarities with any other populations.
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Unlock for access to all 73 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
13
Based on the cultural data, which of the following best describes the opinion of the majority of archaeologists regarding the origins of Native Americans?

A) Native American populations originated in Asia.
B) Native American populations are the result of multiple migrations from both Asia and Western Europe.
C) Native Americas only traveled along the Bering Land Bridge route.
D) It is unclear where the Native American populations originated.
E) Many Native American populations are likely the result of boat travel from Polynesia.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Which of the following best describes the importance of the Monte Verde site?

A) It provides solid evidence for the Bering Land Bridge Theory.
B) It conclusively links the Solutrean and Clovis cultures.
C) It provides definitive evidence for pre-Clovis occupations.
D) It is indicative of marine dependence during the Paleo-Indian period.
E) It contains evidence for the earliest skeletons in the New World.
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15
Fluted point technology

A) is present at the Pre-Clovis site of Monte Verde
B) has clear precursors in northern Asia
C) has no clear Asian predecessors
D) is primarily associated with the Archaic period
E) is probably not an American invention
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16
The Holocene epoch is NOT defined as:

A) the most recent geological epoch
B) the geological period beginning around 11,000 ya.
C) a period of increased global temperatures
D) the geological period associated with the development of broadly based hunting and gathering
E) the period prior to the one in which we now live
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Unlock for access to all 73 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The dry land connection between Asia and America is associated with which proposed models for the entrance of people to the New World?

A) North Atlantic Ice-Edge Corridor
B) Pacific Coastal Route
C) Bering Land Bridge
D) Alaska Connector
E) Siberian Transit Corridor
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Paleo-Indian subsistence is best defined as

A) variable based on local environmental conditions
B) based mostly on marine resources
C) a uniform pattern of specialized megafauna exploitation
D) primarily associated with gathering nut and seed crops
E) focused almost exclusively on mammoths and mastodons
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 73 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The Paleo-Indian period is defined by what cultural feature?

A) microblade technology
B) fluted points
C) Venus figurines
D) intensive nut processing
E) canoe and raft technology
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Which model for the initial settlement is not dependent on the cycle of glacial and inter-glacial periods?

A) North Asian Corridor
B) Pacific Coastal Route
C) Bering Land Bridge
D) Australian Connection
E) Siberian Highway
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Between 12,000 and 11,000 ya, the climate associated with the waning Pleistocene changed, exemplified by

A) increase in temperature and decrease in precipitation.
B) decrease in temperature and decrease in precipitation.
C) increase in temperature and increase in precipitation.
D) decrease in temperature and increase in precipitation.
E) stabilization of earlier Pleistocene temperature and precipitation.
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Unlock for access to all 73 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Which of the following best describes the changes in subsistence practices of groups during the early and middle Holocene?

A) initial systematic exploitation of fish and fowl resources
B) primarily associated with hunting megafauna
C) intensive hunting, fishing, and gathering
D) a decreased emphasis on the importance of plant foods in the diet
E) a switch away from marine resources as sea levels rise
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k this deck
23
Which of the following describes the primary difference between the diet of people in Northern and Western Europe and those in the Near East?

A) Diet in the Near East included more wild plant foods.
B) The European diet included more plant foods.
C) Diet in the Near East included more animal foods.
D) Coastal resources were much more important in the Near East.
E) Coastal resources were not exploited by European groups.
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24
Hunter-gatherers in Western North America, particularly the Great Basin, tended to focus on what environmental feature in addition to upland resources?

A) marshes
B) deciduous forests
C) coastal resources
D) bison herds
E) desert rodents
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Unlock for access to all 73 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Small groups who are highly mobile and typically move to seasonally available resources are known as:

A) collectors
B) foragers
C) hunter-gatherers
D) Mesolithic hunter-gatherers
E) seasonal extractors
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Unlock for access to all 73 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
In what area of North America did highly organized sedentary communities develop based primarily on coastal resources and without domesticated crops?

A) eastern North America
B) Northwest Coast
C) California
D) Great Basin
E) the Southwest
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Groups with a subsistence strategy of relying on a wide range of locally available foods which are brought back to base camps are defined as:

A) collectors
B) foragers
C) seasonal extractors
D) residentially mobile
E) Paleo-Indians
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Unlock for access to all 73 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
In what way did the climate changes at the end of the Pleistocene NOT affect technology?

A) boats became more common
B) implements for working wood became more prevalent
C) wood became increasingly important as a raw material
D) wooden dugout canoes were replaced by foot travel E. skin-covered boats aided in navigating streams and large bodies of water
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 73 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
A pattern of seasonal settlement movements from one resource zone to another is known as:

A) sedentism
B) transhumance
C) foraging
D) subsistence
E) migration
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 73 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Which of the following constituted the primary plant resources utilized in prehistoric California?

A) pine nuts
B) chenopodium
C) acorns
D) squash
E) corn
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Unlock for access to all 73 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The term for collector-type hunter-gatherers from the Near East ca. 12,000 ya is

A) Capsian
B) Archaic
C) Paleo-Indian
D) Kebaran
E) Natufian
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Sites like Ohalo II demonstrate that some food-collecting communities experienced economic changes as long ago as the Last Glacial Maximum, which led to

A) The use of a small range of wild plants and no animals as food.
B) The use of a wide range of wild plants and no animals as food.
C) The use of a wide range of wild plants and animals as food.
D) The use of a small range of wild plants and animals as food.
E) The demise of human populations in the regions affected.
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Unlock for access to all 73 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The increase in human dental caries hypoplasias, periodontal disease and overall reduction in tooth size in Natufian skeletons can be attributed to

A) availability of fewer plant resources
B) diet based upon domesticated wild cattle
C) an abundance of animal meat in the diet
D) bows and arrows which allowed more successful hunting
E) predominace of starchy cereal grains in the diet
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34
What factor is associated with the shift away from big game hunting in the temperate latitudes?

A) the development of new technology which allowed them to more efficiently process other resources
B) climate changes which resulted in many former prey animals going extinct or becoming geographically unavailable
C) a decline in human population caused by the environmental shifts made big-game hunting difficult
D) human over-hunting reduced the populations
E) a smaller range of potentially edible species were exploited
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35
The site of Star Carr, near the North Sea coast, served as a seasonal

A) gathering place for shell fish
B) hunting camp
C) building site for mounds and earthworks
D) whale hunting site
E) shell midden
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36
Which of the following is best describes the current position on the role of humans in megafaunal extinctions?

A) Humans likely played only a small role in this event.
B) Humans and disease played an equal role in this event.
C) Human overhunting was the primary cause.
D) They were likely the result of an extreme period of cold at the end of the Ice Age.
E) Paleo-Indian groups hunted and collected one species of animals, leading to the extinction.
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37
The term used to describe the post-Pleistocene cultures in the Middle East is:

A) Upper Paleolithic
B) Mesolithic
C) Epipaleolithic
D) Archaic
E) Middle Paleolithic
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38
The highly organized communities of the Pacific Northwest prospered by relying on ritualized redistribution that ensured a wider availability of regionals resources. The communities were also practicing a way of living known as:

A) sedentism
B) domestication
C) foraging
D) transhumance
E) gathering
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39
The term used to describe the post-Pleistocene cultures in Europe is:

A) Upper Paleolithic
B) Mesolithic
C) Epipaleolithic
D) Archaic
E) Middle Paleolithic
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40
Eastern Archaic cultures of North America reinforced their claims to homelands by

A) engaging in the potlatch ceremony
B) laying out cemeteries for their dead or building earthwork mounds
C) building large sedentary coastal villages
D) including grave goods in every burial
E) hunting aurochs in abundance
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41
What evidence indicates that the Bering Land Bridge model cannot explain the entirety of the peopling of the New World?
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42
The Epipaleolithic of the Near East was more dependent on wild nut and seed crops than the Mesolithic in northern Europe.
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43
In many parts of North America, hunter-gatherer lifeways were less the collector than the forager type common among their Paleo-Indian ancestors.
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44
Evidence from the Upper Paleolithic in Asia shows that there is no evidence for occupation prior to the initial occupation of the New World.
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45
The Holocene epoch beings around 11,000 years ago.
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46
During the early and middle Holocene, many groups adopt an intensive hunting, fishing, and gathering lifestyle.
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47
What is the Holocene?
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48
Who was the Kennewick man? Why are the remains important for understanding the settlement of the New World?
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49
There is clear evidence implicating humans in the extinction of many species of New World animals at the end of the Pleistocene.
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50
Foragers are typically associated with large, sedentary villages and dense populations.
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51
The earliest skeletons from the New World show greater biological diversity than do modern Native Americans.
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52
An increase of average July temperature by perhaps 20 degrees Fahrenheit has meant much that we have yet to learn about Upper Paleolithic and Archaic/Mesolithic coastal adaptations lies buried under hundreds of feet of seawater off modern coastlines.
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53
What are three sites that provide evidence for the earliest occupation of the New World?
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54
How did early Holocene human subsistence patterns differ from those during the late Pleistocene?
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55
All of the alternative models to the Bering Land Bridge model require the use of watercraft.
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56
Describe the environmental changes that occurred at the end of the Pleistocene.
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57
What is the Paleo-Indian period? What cultural features define this time period?
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58
The Bering Land Bridge represents the technologically simplest point of entry to the New World.
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59
Paleoindians almost exclusively hunted megafauna.
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60
Compared with foragers, food collectors rely much more on a few seasonally abundant resources, and their camps often show evidence of specialized processing and storage technologies.
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61
Knowing when people arrived in the New World is necessarily tied with where they came, because the two tell us where to search in the archaeological record for the first immigrants. Why?
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62
Compare and contrast the Clovis, Folsom, Dalton and Plano Archaeological complexes and detail the importance of each to the lifestyles of the people who used them.
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63
How do foraging and food collecting compare and contrast as subsistence strategies? What are some implications for each with regard to other cultural consequences: group size, mobility, exchange, effect on natural species, etc.?
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64
If people traveled along the pacific coast beginning about 17,000-15,000 ya, when New World inhabitants were suspected as having come from Asia, climatic conditions would have been different than those in the interior. How?
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65
Discuss the possible role of humans in the Pleistocene extinctions.
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66
What are the different models used to explain the peopling of the New World. Discuss the evidence used to support or refute each model.
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67
Why is the settlement of the Americas a difficult issue for archaeologists to address? What aspects of this event as well as the approaches that archaeologists use to understand it inhibit our ability to more definitely address this issue?
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68
Discuss the physical evidence for the initial occupation of the New World.
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69
How do human cultural patterns change at the beginning of the Holocene? What is the role of the environment in this shift? Compare and contrast these developments in Europe, North America, and the Near East.
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70
What is the Paleo-Indian period? When does it date, and what are the associated cultural patterns? Illustrate your answer with examples from sites discussed in the text.
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71
What were some of the environmental changes occurring as a result of the end of the Younger Dryas?
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72
What are specific biological and cultural clues that point to Asian ancestry for the earliest American populations? Why are they controversial?
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73
Using Star Carr or another important site as an example, explain how specific archaeological findings may be used to interpret early Holocene lifeways.
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