It is increasingly recognised that cultural transmission involves inheritance, variation of practice and the differential representation of particular variants in subsequent generations due to a variety of sorting mechanisms. As such, patterns of cultural variation and change (including those seen in lithic artefacts) can be seen as an emergent property of a process of descent with modification. Two immediate analytical implications arise from recognition that changes and variation in lithic artefacts are partly brought about by a process of descent with modification, which have particular relevance for Palaeolithic archaeology. The first of these is that understanding the historical process of lineage descent and diversification (i.e. phylogeny) becomes an imperative research goal; the second is that many of the factors known to structure variation in genetic data (e.g. drift, selection, demography and dispersal) will have an influence upon patterns of variation in the attributes of artefacts. Here, using a data set of Acheulean handaxes, it is demonstrated that methodologies designed to address these issues in biology might profitably be used to address analogous questions pertaining to Palaeolithic technologies. © 2010 Springer-Verlag New York.
CITATION STYLE
Lycett, S. J. (2010). Cultural transmission, genetic models and palaeolithic variability: Integrative analytical approaches. In New Perspectives on Old Stones: Analytical Approaches to Paleolithic Technologies (pp. 207–234). Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-6861-6_9
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