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      Showing off, Foraging Models, and the Ascendance of Large-Game Hunting in the California Middle Archaic

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      American Antiquity
      JSTOR

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          Abstract

          In a recent paper in American Antiquity (2002:231-256), Hildebrandt and McGuire argue that archaeofaunal patterns in California document an ascendance of artiodactyl hunting during the Middle Archaic. They also suggest that such a trend is inconsistent with predictions derived from optimal-foraging models. Given the apparent failure of foraging theory, they advance a “showing off” model of large-game hunting. While their presentation is intriguing, we do not see a theoretical warrant for predicting that show-off hunting would have increased during the Middle Archaic. We present here an alternative hypothesis for the increase in artiodactyl abundances and the hunting-related patterns they identify. That hypothesis follows directly from the prey model itself under what appears to have been a dramatic artiodactyl population expansion after the drought-dominated middle Holocene period.

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          Showing off, handicap signaling, and the evolution of men's work

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            Showing off

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              Why Hunter-Gatherers Work: An Ancient Version of the Problem of Public Goods [and Comments and Reply]

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                applab
                American Antiquity
                American Antiquity
                JSTOR
                0002-7316
                October 2003
                January 2017
                : 68
                : 04
                : 783-789
                Article
                10.2307/3557073
                cbb9403a-9e19-4e61-b3d6-07c7cf315e44
                © 2003
                History

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