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Core Use-Life Distributions in Lithic Assemblages as a Means for Reconstructing Behavioral Patterns
Authors:Matthew J. Douglass  Sam C. Lin  David R. Braun  Thomas W. Plummer
Affiliation:1.College of Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources,University of Nebraska-Lincoln,Lincoln,USA;2.Department of Human Evolution,Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology,Leipzig,Germany;3.School of Earth and Environmental Sciences,University of Wollongong,Wollongong,Australia;4.Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology,George Washington University,Washington,USA;5.Department of Anthropology,George Washington University,Washington,USA;6.Department of Anthropology, Queens College,City University of New York and NYCEP,Flushing,USA
Abstract:Artifacts with varying use-lives have different discard rates and hence are represented unequally among archaeological assemblages. As such, the ability to gauge the use-lives of artifacts is important for understanding the formation of archaeological assemblage variability. In lithic artifacts, use-life can be expressed as the extraction of utility, or work potential, from existing stone volume. Using experimental data and generalized linear modeling, this study develops models of artifact use-life on cores in the form of reduction intensity. We then apply these models to two archaeological case studies to (a) reconstruct the reduction intensities of archaeological cores and (b) investigate the survivorship curves of these archaeological cores across the reduction continuum using the Weibull function. Results indicate variation in core reduction and maintenance with respect to raw material properties and place use history and implicate evolutionary differences between Early Stone Age hominins and Holocene modern humans.
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