Carl P. Lipo, Michael J. O'Brien, Mark Collard, and Stephen Shennan (eds.)
(2005年12月刊行,Transaction Publishers,ISBN:0202307506 [hbk] / ISBN:0202307514 [pbk])
【目次】
List of figures and tables vii
Foreword (Niles Eldredge) xiii
Preface xviiPart 1: Introduction
1. Cultural phylogenies and explanation: Why historical methods matter. (Carl P. Lipo, Michael J. O'Brien, Mark Collard, and Stephen J. Shennan) 3Part 2: Fundamentals and Methods
2. What is a culturally transmitted unit, and how we find one? (Richard Pockington) 19
3. Cultural traits and linguistic trees: Phylogenetic signal in East Africa. (Jennifer W. Moylan, Corine M. Graham, Monique Borgerhoff Mulder, Charles L. Nunn, and N. Thomas Håkansson) 33
4. Branching versus blending in macroscale cultural evolution: A comparative study. (Mark Collard, Stephen Shennan, and Jamshid J. Tehrani) 53
5. Seriation and cladistics: The difference between anagenetic and cladogenetic evolution. (R. Lee Lyman and Michael J. O'Brien) 65
6. The resolution of cultural phylogenies using graphs. (Carl P. Lipo) 89
7. Measuring relatedness. (Robert C. Dunnell) 109Part 3: Biology
8. Phylogenetic techniques and methodological lessons from bioarchaeology. (Gordon F. M. Rakita) 119
9. Phylogeography of archaeological populations: A case study from Rapa Nui (Easter Island). (John V. Dudgeon) 131Part 4: Culture
10. Tracking culture-historical lineages: Can "descent with modification" be linked to "association by descent"? (Peter Jordan and Thomas Mace) 149
11. Cultural transmission, phylogenetics, and the archaeological record. (Jermer W. Eerkens, Robert L. Bettinger, and Richard McElreath) 169
12. Using cladistics to construct lineages of projectile points from Northeastern Missouri. (John Darwent and Michael J. O'Brien) 185
13. Reconstructing the flow of information across time and space: A phylogenetic analysis of ceramic traditions from prehispanic Western and Northern Mexico and the American Southwest. (Marcel J. Harmon, Todd L. VanPool, Robert D. Leonard, Christine S. VanPool, and Laura A. Salter) 209
14. Archaeological-materials characterization as phylogenetic method: The case of copodor pottery from Southeastern Mesoamerica. (Hector Neff) 231Part 5: Language
15. The spread of Bantu languages, farming, and pastoralism in Sub-equatorial Africa. (Clare J. Holden) 249
16. Are accurate dates an intractable problem for historical linguistics? (Quentin D. Atkinson and Russell D. Gray) 269Part 6: Concluding Remarks
17. Afterword (Carl P. Lipo, Michael J. O'Brien, Mark Collard, and Stephen J. Shennan) 299References 303
Contributors 339
Index 341