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At the Cutting Edge of Human Adaptation

机译:在人类适应的最前沿

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摘要

The few societies that still live by foraging for wild food are of great interest to researchers curious about how our ancestors might have lived before the introduction of agriculture thousands of years ago. Two groups that have been intensively studied are the Hadza people of Tanzania and the !Kung San (also known as the Jun/twasi) of the Kalahari Desert. The Hadza continue to hunt and gather today-two attempts at settling them ended in disastrous epidemics and a return to the hard but viable life they are so good at. The !Kung way of life has changed in recent years, but much information was obtained about them in the 1960s and 1970s, when they were still living as hunter-gatherers.
机译:研究人员对少数几家靠觅食野生食物而生存的社会非常感兴趣,他们对我们的祖先在几千年前引入农业之前的生活充满了好奇。经过深入研究的两个群体是坦桑尼亚的Hadza人和卡拉哈里沙漠的!Kung San(也称为Jun / twasi)。哈扎(Hadza)今天继续狩猎和收集-两次定居的尝试以灾难性的流行病告终,并回到了他们如此擅长的艰苦而可行的生活。近年来,!Kung的生活方式已经发生了变化,但是在1960年代和1970年代,当他们仍然是狩猎采集者时,他们获得了很多信息。

著录项

  • 来源
    《American Scientist》 |2011年第1期|p.73-76|共4页
  • 作者

    Melvin Konner;

  • 作者单位

    Teaches anthropology and behavioral biology at Emory University;

  • 收录信息 美国《科学引文索引》(SCI);
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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