I think it no exaggeration to say that Lewis Binford’s (1980) characterization of hunter-gatherer mobility strategies has become foundational to modern archaeological practice. In one form or another, Binford’s formulation of the forager-collector continuum is taught in introductory archaeology classes, described in textbooks (see Fagan 1995: 88–90), used in countless professional discussions about hunter-gatherer adaptations, and debated at the level of theory by others (see Bettinger 1991; Kelly 1995). The model has been modified and refined through these discussions and examinations of case studies, both ethnographic as well as archaeological
CITATION STYLE
Aldenderfer, M. (2002). Explaining Changes in Settlement Dynamics across Transformations of Modes of Production (pp. 387–412). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-0543-3_15
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