Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-20T07:31:53.923Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Part IV - Marxian And Post-Colonial Approaches as well as World System Theory in Relation to Gift Exchange and MacroRegional Exchange

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 August 2022

Johan Ling
Affiliation:
University of Gothenburg, Sweden
Richard J. Chacon
Affiliation:
Winhrop University, South Carolina
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Trade before Civilization
Long Distance Exchange and the Rise of Social Complexity
, pp. 287 - 382
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References

Appadurai, A. (1986). Commodities and the Politics of Value. In Appadurai, A., ed., The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 363.Google Scholar
Arthur, C. J. (1970). Introduction to Marx, K. and Engels F. The German Ideology. London: Lawrence and Wishart.Google Scholar
Bloch, M., and Parry, J. (1982). Death and the Regeneration of Life. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Bohannan, P. (1955). Some Principles of Exchange and Investment among the Tiv. American Anthropologist LVII, pp. 6069.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bourdieu, P. (1977). Outline of a Theory of Practice. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cohen, A. (1981). The Politics of Elite Culture. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Damon, F. (1980). The Problem of the Kula on Woodlark Island: Expansion, Accumulation and Overproduction. Ethnos 45, pp. 176201.Google Scholar
Damon, F. (2016). Trees, Knots and Outriggers. Oxford: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Dumont, L. (1980). Homo Hierachicus. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Dupre, G., and Rey, P.-P. (1980). Reflections on the Relevance of a Theory of the History of Exchange. In Wolpe, H., ed., The Articulation of Modes of Production: Essays from Economy and Society. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, pp. 7796.Google Scholar
Durkheim, E. (1964). Elementary Forms of the Religious Life. London: Allen and Unwin.Google Scholar
Ekholm, K. (1977). External Exchange and the Transformation of Central African Societies. In Friedman, J. and Rowlands, M. J., eds., The Evolution of Social Systems. London. Duckworth, pp. 115136.Google Scholar
Evans-Pritchard, E. E. (1953). The Sacrificial Role of Cattle among the Nuer. Africa 23:3, pp. 181197.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Evans-Pritchard, E. E. (1956). Nuer Religion. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Frankenstein, S., and Rowlands, M. (1978). The Internal Structure and Regional Context of early Iron Age Society in South Western Germany. Bulletin of the Institute of Archaeology 15, pp. 73112.Google Scholar
Goheen, M. (1996). Men Own the Fields, Women own the Crops. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Graeber, D. (2001). Towards an Anthropological Theory of Value: The False Coin of Our Own Dreams. New York: Palgrave.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Graeber, D. (2011). Debt: The First 5000 years. New York: Melville House.Google Scholar
Graeber, D. (2013). It Is Value That Brings Universes into Being. HAU Journal of Ethnographic Theory 3:2: pp. 219243.Google Scholar
Graeber, D. (2014). On the Moral Grounds of Economic relations: A Maussian Approach. Journal of Classical Sociology 14:1, pp. 6577.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gregory, C. A. (2015). Gifts and Commodities. 2nd ed. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Guyer, J. (1993). Wealth in People and Self-Realisation in Equatorial Africa. Man 28:2, pp. 243265.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Guyer, J. (2004). Marginal Gains: Monetary Transactions in Atlantic Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Helms, M. (1993). Ulysses Sails: An Ethnographic Odyssey of Power, Knowledge and Geographical Distance. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Hubert, H., and Mauss, M. (1964). Sacrifice: Its Nature and Function. London: Cohen and West.Google Scholar
Janzen, J. (1982). Lemba 1650–1930: A Drum of Affliction in Africa and the New World. New York: Garland.Google Scholar
Josephides, L. (1985). The Production of Inequality: Gender and Exchange among the Kewa. London: Tavistock.Google Scholar
Leach, E. (1961). Rethinking Anthropology. London: Athlone Press.Google Scholar
Ling, J., and Rowlands, M. (2015). The Stranger King & Rock Art. In Skoglund, P., Ling, J. and Bertilsson, U., eds., Picturing the Bronze Age. Oxford: Oxbow Books, pp. 89104.Google Scholar
Luxemburg, R. (1951). The Accumulation of Capital. London: Routledge Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Marx, K. (1977). Capital. Vol 1. London: Lawrence and Wishart.Google Scholar
Marx, K., and Engels, F. (1970). The German Ideology, 1859/1970: Preface to the Critique of Political Economy. In Marx, K. and Engels, F., Selected Works. London: Lawrence and Wishart, pp. 180184.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. (1960). Essai d’interprétation du phénomène économique dans les sociétés traditionnelles d’autosubsistance. Cahiers d’études africaines 4, pp. 3867.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meillassoux, C. (1978). The Economy in Agricultural Self-Sustaining Societies: A Preliminary Analysis. In Seddon, D., ed., Relations of Production: Marxist Approaches to Economic Anthropology. London: Frank Cass, pp. 127157.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. (1981). Maiden, Meals and Money. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Munn, J. (1984). Fame of Gawa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Mauss, M. ([1925] 2015). The Gift. Selected, annotated, and translated by Jane I. Guyer. Chicago: HAU Books.Google Scholar
Parry, J. (1986). The Gift, the Indian Gift and the ‘Indian Gift’. Man 21:3, pp. 453473.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pels, P. (1998). The Spirit of Matter: On Fetish, Rarity, Fact and Fancy. In Spyer, P., ed., Border Fetishisms. Material Objects in Unstable Spaces. New York; London: Routledge, pp. 91121.Google Scholar
Pietz, W. (1985). The Problem of the Fetish, I. Res 9: 517.Google Scholar
Polanyi, K. (1944). The Great Transformation. Boston: Beacon Press.Google Scholar
Rey, P.-P. (1975). The Lineage Mode of Production. Critique of Anthropology 4:1, pp. 2779.Google Scholar
Roschenthaler, U. (2011). Purchasing Culture: The Dissemination of Associations in the Cross River Region of Cameroon and Nigeria. Trenton: Africa World Press.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M. (1985). Islands of History. Chicago: University of Chicago.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M. (2008). The Stranger King or Elementary Forms of the Politics of Life. Indonesia and the Malay World 36:105, pp. 177199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, W. R. (1907). Lectures on the Religion of the Semites: Series 1: The Fundamental Institutions. New ed., revised throughout by the author. London: Black.Google Scholar
Strathern, M. (1988). The Gender of the Gift. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Sutton, D. (2002). Anthropology’s Value(s): A Review of David Graeber. 2002. Toward An Anthropological Theory of Value: The False Coin of Our Own Dreams. New York: Palgrave, pp. xiii + 337.Google Scholar
Terray, E. (1972). Marxism and ‘Primitive’ Societies. New York: Monthly Review Press.Google Scholar
Traherne, P. (1995). The Warrior’s Beauty: The Masculine Body and Self-Identity in Bronze Age Europe. Journal of European Archaeology 3:1, pp. 105144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trapido, J. (2016). Potlatch and the Articulation of Modes of Production: Revisiting French Marxist Anthropology and the History of Central Africa. Dialectical Anthropology 40:3, pp. 199220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trapido, J. (2017) Breaking Rocks: Music, Ideology and Economic Collapse from Paris to Kinshasa. Oxford: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Turner, T. Y. (2008). Marxian Value Theory: An Anthropological Perspective. Anthropological Theory 8:1, pp. 4356.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tylor, E. B. (1958). Primitive Culture. New York: Harper.Google Scholar
Wengrow, D., and Graeber, D. (2018). ‘Many Seasons Ago’: Slavery and Its Rejection among Foragers on the Pacific Coast of North America. American Anthropologist 120:2, pp. 237249.Google Scholar
Viveiros de Castro, , E. (1992). From the Enemy’s Point of View: Humanity and Diversity in an Amazonian Society. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

References

Berger, D., Soles, J. S., Giumlia-Mair, A. R., Brügmann, G., Galili, E., Lockhoff, N., and Pernicka, P. (2019). Isotope Systematics and Chemical Composition of Tin Ingots from Mochlos (Crete) and Other Late Bronze Age Sites in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea: An Ultimate Key to Tin Provenance? PLoS ONE, pp. 1–37. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0218326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brink, K. (2013). Houses and Hierarchies: Economic and Social Relations in the Late Neolithic and Early Bronze Age of Southernmost Scandinavia. European Journal of Archaeology 16:3, pp. 433458.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brunn, W. A. von (1959). Die Hortfunde der frühen Bronzezeit aus Sachsen-Anhalt, Sachsen und Thüringen. Deutsche Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin, Schriften der Sektion für Vor- und Frühgeschichte 7. Berlin: Akademie-Verlag.Google Scholar
Czebreszuk, J., and Müller, J. (2004). Bruszczewo I. Ausgrabungen und Forschungen in einer prähistorischen Siedlungskammer Großpolens. Studien zur Archäologie in Ostmitteleuropa 2. Westfalen: Rahden.Google Scholar
Earle, T. (1997). How Chiefs come to Power: The Political Economy in Prehistory. Stanford: Stanford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Earle, T., Ling, J., Uhnér, C., Stos-Gale, Z., and Melheim, L. (2015). The Political Economy and Metal Trade in Bronze Age Europe: Understanding Regional Variability in Terms of Comparative Advantages and Articulations. European Journal of Archaeology 18:4, pp. 633657.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Felding, L., Reiter, S. S., Frei, K. M., and Vandkilde, H. (2020). Male Social Roles and Mobility in the Early Nordic Bronze Age: A Perspective from SE Jutland. Danish Journal of Archaeology 9, pp. 1167. doi:10.7146/dja.v9i0.117955.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, A. P., and Barclay, A. (2011). The Amesbury Archer and the Boscombe Bowmen: Bell Beaker Burials at Boscombe Down, Amesbury, Wiltshire. Salisbury: Wessex Archaeology.Google Scholar
Fokkens, H., Valentijn, P., and Fontijn, D. (2013). Archaeology from the Dutch Twilight Zone. In Bergerbrant, S. and Sabatini, S., eds., Counterpoint: Essays in Archaeology and Heritage Studies in Honour of Professor Kristian Kristiansen. BAR International Series 2508. Oxford: Archaeopress, pp. 531540.Google Scholar
Frei, K. M., Mannering, U., Kristiansen, K., Allentoft, M. E., Wilson, A. S., Skals, I., Tridico, S., Nosch, M. L., Willerslev, E., Clarke, L., and Frei, R. (2015). Tracing the Dynamic Life Story of a Bronze Age Female. Scientific Reports 5:10431, pp. 17. doi:10.1038/srep10431.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Frei, K. M., Bergerbrant, S., Sjögren, K.-G., Jørkov, M. L., Lynnerup, N., Harvig, L., et al. (2019). Mapping Human Mobility during the Third and Second Millennia BC in Present-Day Denmark. PLoS ONE 14:8: e0219850. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0219850.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Haustein, M., Gillis, C., and Pernicka, E. (2010). Tin Isotopy: A New Method for Solving Old Questions. Archaeometry 52, pp. 816832.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helms, M. W. (1988). Ulysses’ Sail: An Ethnographic Odyssey of Power, Knowledge, and Geographical Distance. Princeton: Princeton University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holst, M. K., and Rasmussen, M., eds. (2015). Skelhøj and the Bronze Age Barrows of Southern Scandinavia: Barrow Building and Barrow Assemblies. Vol. 2. Jysk Arkæologisk Selskabs Skrifter. Aarhus: Aarhus University Press.Google Scholar
Klassen, L. (2000). Frühes Kupfer im Norden. Aarhus: Jysk Arkæologisk Selskab.Google Scholar
Kristiansen, K., and Larsson, T. B. (2005). The Rise of Bronze Age Society: Travels, Transmissions and Transformations. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ling, J. (2008). Elevated Rock Art: Towards a Maritime Understanding of Bronze Age Rock Art in Northern Bohuslän, Sweden. Gothenburg: Gothenburg University Press.Google Scholar
Ling, J., Earle, T., and Kristiansen, K. (2018). Maritime Mode of Production: Raiding and Trading in Seafaring Chiefdoms. Current Anthropology 59:5, pp. 488524. doi:192.038.032.009.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ling, J., and Rowlands, M. (2015). The Stranger King and Rock Art. In Skoglund, P., Ling, J. and Bertilsson, U., eds., Picturing the Bronze Age. Oxford: Oxbow Books, pp. 89105.Google Scholar
Ling, J., Stos-Gale, Z., Grandin, L., Billström, K., Hjärthner-Holdar, E., and Persson, P.-O. (2014). Moving Metals II: Provenancing Scandinavian Bronze Age Artefacts by Lead Isotope and Elemental Analyses. Journal of Archaeological Science 41, pp. 106132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maran, J. (2011). Bright as the Sun: The Appropriation of Amber Objects in Mycenaean Greece. In Hahn, H. P. and Weiss, H., eds., Mobility, Meaning and the Transformation of Things. Oxford: Oxbow, pp. 147169.Google Scholar
Maran, J., and van de Moortel, J. (2014). A Horse-Bridle Piece with Carpatho-Danubian Connections from Late Helladic I Mitrou and the Emergence of a Warlike Elite in Greece during the Shaft Grave Period. American Journal of Archaeology 118:4, pp. 529548.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mauss, M. (1990) [1950]. The Gift: The Form and Reason for Exchange in Archaic Societies. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Melheim, L., and Horn, C. (2014). Tales of Hoards and Swordfighters in Early Bronze Age Scandinavia: The Brand New and the Broken. Norwegian Archaeological Review 47:1, pp. 1841.Google Scholar
Meller, H., ed. (2004). Der geschmiedete Himmel. Die weite Welt im Herzen Europas vor 3600 Jahren. Halle; Saale: Landesmuseum für Vorgeschichte.Google Scholar
Mittnik, A., Massy, K., Knipper, C., Wittenborn, F., Friedrich, R., Pfrengle, S., Burri, M., Carlichi-Witjes, N., Deeg, H., Furtvängler, A., Harbeck, M., von Heyking, K., Kociumaka, C., Kucukkalipci, I., Lindauer, S., Metz, S., Staskiewicz, A., Thiel, A., Wahl, J., Haak, W., Pernicka, E., Schiffels, S., Stockhammer, P.W., and Krause, J. (2019). Kinship-Based Social Inequality in Bronze Age Europe. Science (8 November), pp. 731–734.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Müller, J., Czebreszuk, J., and Kneisel, J., eds. (2010). Bruszczewo II. Ausgrabungen und Forschungen in einer prähistorischen Siedlungskammer Großpolens. Vols I–II. Studien zur Archäologie in Ostmitteleuropa 6. Bonn: Verlag Rudolf Habelt.Google Scholar
Needham, S. (2009). Encompassing the Sea: ‘Maritories’ and Bronze Age Maritime Interactions. In Clark, P., ed., Bronze Age Connections: Cultural Contact in Prehistoric Europe. Oxford: Oxbow Books, pp. 1237.Google Scholar
Nørgaard, H. W., Pernicka, E., and Vandkilde, H. (2019). On the Trail of Scandinavia’s Early Metallurgy: Provenance, Transfer and Mixing. PLoS ONE 14:7, pp. 132. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0219574.Google Scholar
Nørgaard, H. W., Pernicka, E., and Vandkilde, H. (2021). Shifting Networks and Mixing Metals: Changing Metal Trade Routes to Scandinavia Correlate with Neolithic and Bronze Age Transformations. PLoS ONE 16:6, pp. 141. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0252376.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pernicka, E. (2010). Archäometallurgische Untersuchungen am und zu Hortfund von Nebra. In Meller, H. and Bertemes, F., eds., Der Griff nach den Sternen. Internationales Symposium in Halle (Saale) 16.-21. Februar 2005. Halle; Saale: Landesmuseum für Vorgeschichte, pp. 719734.Google Scholar
Pernicka, E., Nessel, B., Mehofer, M., and Safta, E. (2016). Lead Isotope Analyses of Metal Objects from the Apa Hoard and Other Early and Middle Bronze Age Items from Romania. Archaeologia Austriaca 100, pp. 5786.Google Scholar
Pokutta, D. (2013). Population Dynamics, Diet and Migrations of the Únĕtice Culture in Poland. GOTARC Series B 60. Wroclaw: The Polish Academy of Science.Google Scholar
Rassmann, C. (2015). Pragtøkserne fra Arildskov. Et depotfund fra bronzealderen. Midtjyske Fortællinger – Museum Midtjylland, pp. 28–40.Google Scholar
Risch, R., and Meller, H. (2013). Wandel und Kontinuität in Europa und im Mittelmeerraum um 1600 v. C hr. In Meller, H., Bertemes, F., Bork, H.-R. and Risch, R., eds., 1600 – Kultureller Umbruch im Schatten des Thera-Ausbruchs? 1600 – Cultural Change in the Shadow of the Thera-Eruption? 4th Archaeological Conference of Central Germany October 14–16, 2011 in Halle (Saale)14. bis 16. Oktober 2011 in Halle (Saale). Halle; Saale: Landesmuseum für Vorgeschichte, pp. 597613.Google Scholar
Sahlins, M. (1985). Islands of History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Schivelbusch, W. (1986). The Railway Journey: The Industrialisation of Time and Space in the 19th Century. Leamington Spa; Hamburg; New York: Berg.Google Scholar
Skoglund, P. (2013). Iron Age Rock-Art: A View from Järrestad in South East Sweden. European Journal of Archaeology 16:4, pp. 685703Google Scholar
Skoglund, P. (2016). Rock Art through Time: Scanian Rock Carvings in the Bronze Age and Earliest Iron Age. Swedish Rock Art Series: Volume 5. Oxford; Philadelphia: Oxbow Books.Google Scholar
Stos-Gale, Z. A. (2017). Interpretation of Lead Isotope Results from the Pile Hoard. In Vandkilde, H., eds., The Metal Hoard from Pile in Scania, Sweden. Place, Things, Time, Metals, and Worlds around 2000 BCE. With contributions by P. Northover, K. Becker and Z. A. Stos-Gale. The Swedish History Museum Studies 29. Aarhus: Aarhus University Press.Google Scholar
Strahm, C. (1972). Das Beil von Thun-Renzenbühl. Helvetia Archaeologica 3, pp. 99112.Google Scholar
Treherne, P. (1995). The Warrior’s Beauty: The Masculine Body and Self-Identity in Bronze-Age Europe. Journal of European Archaeology 3:1, pp. 105144.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vandkilde, H. (1996). From Stone to Bronze: The Metalwork of the Late Neolithic and Earliest Bronze Age in Denmark. Aarhus: Jutland Archaeological Society and Aarhus University Press.Google Scholar
Vandkilde, H. (2014). The Breakthrough of the Nordic Bronze Age: Scandinavia and the Carpathian Basin in the 16th century BCE. European Journal of Archaeology 17:4, pp. 602663.Google Scholar
Vandkilde, H. (2016). Bronzization: The Bronze Age as pre-Modern Globalization. Prähistorisch Zeitschrift 91:1, pp. 103223.Google Scholar
Vandkilde, H. (2017a). The Metal Hoard from Pile in Scania, Sweden: Place, Things, Time, Metals, and Worlds around 2000 BCE. With contributions by P. Northover, K. Becker and Z. A. Stos-Gale. The Swedish History Museum Studies 29. Aarhus: Aarhus University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vandkilde, H. (2017b). Small, Medium, Large: Globalisation Perspectives on the Afro-Eurasian Bronze Age. In Hodos, T., ed., The Routledge Handbook of Archaeology and Globalization. London: Routledge, pp. 509521.Google Scholar
Vandkilde, H. (2019). Bronze Age Beginnings: A Scalar View from the Global Outskirts. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 85, pp. 127. doi.org/10.1017/ppr.2019.7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Werner, M., and Zimmermann, B. (2006). Beyond Comparison: Histoire Croisée and the Challenge of Reflexivity. History and Theory 45, pp. 3050.Google Scholar

References

Adamczak, K., Kowalski, L., Bojarski, J., Weinkauf, M., Garbacz-Klemka, A. (2015). Eneolithic Metal Objects Hoard from Kałdus, Chełmno Commune, Kujawsko-Pomorskie Voivodeship. Sprawozdania Archeologiczne 67, pp. 199219.Google Scholar
Angeli, W. (1967). Der Depotfund von Stollhof. Annalen des Naturhistorischen Museums Wien 70, pp. 491496.Google Scholar
Austin, M., and Vidal-Naquet, P. (1984). Gesellschaft und Wirtschaft im alten Griechenland.Google Scholar
Bátora, J. (2003). Kupferne Schaftlochäxte in Mittel-, Ost und Südosteuropa (Zu Kulturkontakten und Datierung – Äneolithikum / Frühbronzezeit). Slovenská Archeológia 51, pp. 138.Google Scholar
Casini, S., ed. (1994). Le pietre degli dei. Menhir e stele dell´Età del Rame in Valcamonica e Valtellina. Bergamo.Google Scholar
Casini, S., and Fossati, A. E., eds. (2007). Le pietre degli dei. Statue-stele del’ età del rame in Europa. Lo stato della ricerca. Atti del Congresso Internazionale Brescia 16.–18.9. 2004. Notizie Archeologiche Bergomensi 12, 2004.Google Scholar
Chernych, E. N., and Orlovskaja, L.B. (2008). Fenomen majkopskoj obshnosti i ee radiouglerodnaja khronologija. In Merpert, N. Ja. and Korenevskij, S. N., eds., Arkheologia Kavkaza i Blizhnego Vostoka. Moscow, pp. 259275.Google Scholar
Chernykh, E. N. (1992). Ancient Metallurgy in the USSR: The Early Metal Age. Cambridge.Google Scholar
Childe, V. G. (1958) [2009]. The Prehistory of European Society. London.Google Scholar
Czekaj-Zastawny, A., Kabaciński, J., and Terberger, T. (2011). Long Distance Exchange in the Central European Neolithic: Hungary to the Baltic. Antiquity 85, pp. 4358.Google Scholar
Dalton, G. (1965). Primitive Money. American Anthropologist 67, pp. 4465.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
de Marinis, R. C. (1992). La più antica metallurgia nell´Italia settentrionale. In Höpfel, F., Platzer, W. and Spindler, K., eds., Der Mann im Eis. Innsbruck, pp. 389409.Google Scholar
Dergačev, V. (2002). Die äneolithischen und bronzezeitlichen Metallfunde aus Moldavien. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Dreyer, G. (2011). Tomb U-j: A Royal Burial of Dynasty 0 at Abydos. Günter Dreyer. In Teeter, E., ed., Before the Pyramids: The Origins of Egyptian Civilization. Chicago, pp. 127136.Google Scholar
Eliade, M. (1980). Schmiede und Alchemisten. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Engels, F. (1884) [1981]. Der Ursprung der Familie, des Privateigentums und des Staats. In Anschluss an Lewis. H. Morgans Forschungen. MEW 21. Berlin; Ost, pp. 25173.Google Scholar
Feinman, G. M. (2017). Multiple Pathways to Large-Scale Human Cooperative Networks: A Reframing. In Chacon, R. J. and Mendoza, R. G., eds., Feast, Famine or Fighting? Multiple Pathways to Social Complexity. Cham, pp. 459478.Google Scholar
Fleckinger, A., ed. (2011). Ötzi 2.0. Eine Mumie zwischen Wissenschaft, Kult und Mythos. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Foucault, M. (1978). Dispositive der Macht. Über Sexualität, Wissen und Wahrheit. Berlin.Google Scholar
Fried, M. H. (1967). The Evolution of Political Society. New York.Google Scholar
Gaudszinski-Windheuser, S., and Jöris, O. (2015). Contextualizing the Female Image: Symbols for Common Ideas and Communal Identity in Upper Palaeolithic Societies. In Coward, F., Hosfield, R., Pope, M. and Wenban-Smith, F., eds., Settlement, Society and Cognition in Human Evolution: Landscapes in Mind. Cambridge, pp. 288314.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Genthe, H. (1874). Über den etruskischen Tauschhandel nach dem Norden. Frankfurt.Google Scholar
Gimbutas, M. (1995). Die Sprache der Göttin. Das verschüttete Symbolsystem der westlichen Zivilisation. Frankfurt.Google Scholar
Godelier, M. (1999). Das Rätsel der Gabe. Geld, Geschenke, heilige Objekte. München.Google Scholar
Govedarica, B. (2001). Zur Typologie und Chronologie der Hammeräxte vom Typ Pločnik. In Boehmer, R. M. and Maran, J., eds., Lux Orientis. Archäologie zwischen Asien und Europa. Festschrift für Harald Hauptmann. Rahden; Westf, pp. 153164.Google Scholar
Govedarica, B. (2002). Die Majkop-Kultur zwischen Europa und Asien: Zur Entstehung einer Hochkultur im Nordkaukasus während des 4. Jts. v. Chr. In Aslan, R. et al., eds., Mauerschau. M. Festschrift für Manfred Korfmann Bd. 2. Remshalden-Grumbac, pp. 781799.Google Scholar
Govedarica, B. (2005). Eine Kupferaxt aus Frankfurt/Oder, die Datierungsprobleme des Hortfundes von Cărbuna und die Chronologie der Hammeräxte vom Typ Pločnik. In Spinei, V. et al., eds., Scripta praehistorica. Miscellanea in honorem nonagenarii magistri Mircea Petrescu-Dîmboviţa oblata. Iaşi, pp. 445459.Google Scholar
Govedarica, B. (2010). Spuren von Fernbeziehungen in Norddeutschland während des 5. Jahrtausends v. Chr. Das Altertum 55, pp. 112.Google Scholar
Grote, K. (2004). Die spätneolithische Kupferaxt von Reiffenhausen, Ldkr. Göttingen, Südniedersachsen. Archäologisches Korrespondenzblatt 34, pp. 321336.Google Scholar
Haak, W., Lazaridis, I., Patterson, N., Rohland, N., Mallick, S., Llamas, B., Brandt, G., Nordenfelt, S., Harney, E., Stewardson, K., Fu, Q., Mittnik, A., Bánffy, E., Economou, C., Francken, M., Friederich, S., Garrido Pena, R., Hallgren, F., Khartanovich, V., Khokhlov, A., Kunst, M., Kuznetsov, P., Meller, H., Mochalov, O., Moiseyev, V., Nicklisch, N., Pichler, S. L., Risch, R., Rojo Guerra, M. A., Roth, C., Szécsényi-Nagy, A., Wahl, J., Meyer, M., Krause, J., Brown, D., Anthony, D., Cooper, A., Alt, K. A. and Reich, D. (2015). Massive migration from the steppe was a source for Indo-European languages in Europe. Nature 522, 207–211. doi:10.1038/nature14317.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hansen, S. (1995). Aspekte des Gabentauschs und Handels während der Urnenfelderzeit in Mittel- und Nordeuropa im Lichte der Fundüberlieferung. In Hänsel, B., ed., Handel, Tausch und Verkehr im bronze- und früheisenzeitlichen Südosteuropa. München; Berlin, pp. 6780.Google Scholar
Hansen, S. (2009). Kupferzeitliche Äxte zwischen dem 5. und 3. Jahrtausend in Südosteuropa. Analele Banatului, S.N. 17, pp. 129158.Google Scholar
Hansen, S. (2010). Communication and Exchange between the Northern Caucasus and Central Europe in the Fourth Millennium BC. In Hansen, S., Hauptmann, A., Motzenbäcker, I. and Pernicka, E., eds., Von Majkop bis Trialeti. Gewinnung und Verbreitung von Metallen und Obsidian in Kaukasien im 4.–2. Jt. v. Chr. Kolloquien zur Vor- und Frühgeschichte 13. Bonn, pp. 297316.Google Scholar
Hansen, S. (2011). Technische und soziale Innovationen in der zweiten Hälfte des 4. Jahrtausends v. Chr. In Hansen, S. and Müller, J., eds., Sozialarchäologische Perspektiven: Gesellschaftlicher Wandel 5000–1500 v. Chr. zwischen Atlantik und Kaukasus. Archäologie in Eurasien 24. Main, pp. 153191.Google Scholar
Hansen, S. (2012). The Archaeology of Power. In Kienlin, T., Zimmermann, A., eds., Beyond Elites: Alternatives to Hierarchical Systems in Modelling Social Formations. International Conference at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany October 22–24, 2009. Bonn, pp. 213224.Google Scholar
Hansen, S. (2014a). Goldene Scheiben aus der Kupferzeit. Das Altertum 59, pp. 81108.Google Scholar
Hansen, S. (2014b). Gold and Silver in the Maikop Culture. In Meller, H., Risch, R. and Pernicka, E., eds., Metalle der Macht – Frühes Gold und Silber. Metals of Power – Early Gold and Silver. Halle, pp. 389410.Google Scholar
Hansen, S. (2016a). Gabe und Erinnerung – Heiligtum und Opfer. In Hansen, S., Neumann, D. and Vachta, T., eds., Raum, Gabe und Erinnerung. Weihgaben und Heiligtümer. Berlin Studies of the Ancient World 38. Berlin, pp. 211236.Google Scholar
Hansen, S. (2016b). Early Neolithic Figurines in Aşağı Pınar, Turkish Thrace. In Yalçın, Ü., ed., Anatolian Metal VII. Anatolien und seine Nachbarn vor 10.000 Jahren. Anatolia and Neighbours 10,000 Years Ago. Bochum, pp. 8594.Google Scholar
Hansen, S. (2016c). Prähistorische Innovationsforschung. Das Altertum 61, pp. 81132.Google Scholar
Hansen, S., and Helwing, B. (2016). Die Anfänge der Silbermetallurgie in Eurasien. In Bartelheim, M., Horejs, B. and Krauße, R., eds., Von Baden bis Troia; Ressourcennutzung, Metallurgie und Wissenstransfer. Eine Jubiläumsschrift für Ernst Pernicka. Rahden; Westf, pp. 4158.Google Scholar
Harris, M. (1990). Kannibalen und Könige. Die Wachstumsgrenzen der Hochkulturen. Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Haßmann, H., Fries, J. E., and Zehm, B. (2015). Kupfer aus der Steinzeit. Hortfund in Osnabrück-Lüstringen. Archäologie in Deutschland 6.Google Scholar
Hodder, I., and Mol, A. (2015). Network Analysis and Entanglement. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 22:1, pp 132.Google Scholar
Hoppenhaupt, M. E. (1750). Ausführliche Beschreibung eines alten heydnischen Grabes. Merseburg.Google Scholar
Ivanova, M. (2016). Stop and Go: Die Ausbreitung kaukasischer Metallformen in Osteuropa in der ersten Hälfte des 3. Jt. v. Chr. In Nikolov, V. and Schier, W., eds., Der Schwarzmeerraum vom Neolithikum bis in die Früheisenzeit (6000–600 v. Chr.). Kulturelle Interferenzen in der zirkumpontischen Zone und Kontakte mit ihren Nachbargebieten. Rahden; Westf, pp. 403415.Google Scholar
Kelly-Buccelati, M. (1999). Trade in Metals in the Third Millennium: Northeastern Syria and Eastern Anatolia. In Matthiae, P., van Loon, M. and Weiss, H., eds., Resurrecting the Past: A Joint Tribute to Adnan Bounni. Istanbul, pp. 117132.Google Scholar
Knappett, C. (2014). Commentary: What Are Social Network Perspectives in Archaeology? Archaeological Review from Cambridge 29:1, pp. 179184.Google Scholar
Kohl, P. L. (2007). The Making of Bronze Age Eurasia. Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Korenevskij, S. N. (2008). Sovremennye problemy izuchenija maikopskoj kul’tur. In Merpert, N. Ja. and Korenevskij, S. N., eds., Arkheologia Kavkaza i Blizhnego Vostoka. Moscow, pp. 71122.Google Scholar
Korenevskij, C. H. (2011). Древнейший метaлл Предкавказья. Moscow.Google Scholar
Kunkel, O. (1937). Der ‘steinzeitliche’ Kupferfund von Mühlenbeck, Kr. Greifenhagen. Monatsblätter der Gesellschaft für Pommersche Geschichte und Altertumskunde 51, pp. 7580.Google Scholar
Laux, F. (2000). Die Äxte und Beile in Niedersachsen I (Flach-, Randleisten- und Absatzbeile). Stuttgart.Google Scholar
Lévi-Strauss, C. (1981). Die elementaren Strukturen der Verwandtschaft. Frankfurt am Main.Google Scholar
Liverani, M. (2006). Uruk: The First City. London: Oakville.Google Scholar
Malinowski, B. (1984). Argonauten des westlichen Pazifiks. Frankfurt.Google Scholar
Marx, K. (1976). Die ethnologischen Exzerpthefte. Herausgegeben von L. Krader. Frankfurt.Google Scholar
Marx, K., and Engels, F. (1848). Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei. In Karl Marx und Friedrich Engels, Werke Bd. 4. Berlin, pp. 461493. English translation by S. Moore in cooperation with F. Engels 1888, Marxists Internet Archive. marxists.org.Google Scholar
Mattheußer, E. (1991). Die geographische Ausrichtung bandkeramischer Häuser. In Studien zur Siedlungsarchäologie I. Bonn, pp. 343.Google Scholar
Matthias, W. (1969). Die Schnurkeramik im westlichen Mitteldeutschland. In Veröffentlichungen des Landesmuseums für Vorgeschichte in Halle 24, pp. 9–28.Google Scholar
Mauss, M. (1968). Die Gabe. Form und Funktion des Austauschs in archaischen Gesellschaften. Frankfurt am Main.Google Scholar
Mauss, M. (2012). Schriften zur Religionssoziologie. Berlin.Google Scholar
McGovern, P. E., Hartung, U., Badler, V. R., Glusker, D., and Exner, L. (1997). The Beginnings of Winemaking and Viniculture in the Ancient Near East and Egypt. Expedition 39, pp. 321.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. (1972). A Marxist Approach to Economic Anthropology. Economy and Society 1, pp. 93105.Google Scholar
Möller, A. (2000). Naukratis. Trade in Archaic Greece. Oxford.Google Scholar
Montelius, O. (1911). Der Handel in der Vorzeit mit besonderer Hinsicht auf Skandinavien und die Zeit vor Christi Geburt. Prähistorische Zeitschrift 4, pp. 249291.Google Scholar
Muscarella, O. W. (1969). The Tumuli at Sé Girdan. A Preliminary Report. Metropolitan Museum Journal 2, pp. 526.Google Scholar
Muscarella, O. W. (1971). The Tumuli at Sé Girdan: Second Report. Metropolitan Museum Journal 4, pp. 528.Google Scholar
Muscarella, O. W. (2003). The Chronology and Culture of Sé Girdan: Phase III. Ancient Civilizations from Skythia to Siberia 9, pp. 117132.Google Scholar
Müller, D. W. (1994). Die Bernburger Kultur Mitteldeutschlands im Spiegel ihrer nichtmegalithischen Kollektivgräber. Jahreschrift für Mitteldeutsche Vorgeschichte 76, pp. 75200.Google Scholar
Müller, J., Hoffmann, R., Brandstätter, L., Ohlrau, R., and Videiko, M. (2016). Chronology and Demography: How Many People Lived in a Mega-Site? In Müller, J., Rassmann, K. and Videiko, M., eds., Trypilla Mega-Sites and European Prehistory 4100–3400. Oxford, pp. 133170.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oka, R., and Kusimba, C. M. (2008). The Archaeology of Trading Systems, Part 1: Towards a New Trade Synthesis. Journal of Archaeological Research 16, pp. 339395.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oppitz, M. (1991). Onkels Tochter, keine sonst. Heiratsbündnis und Denkweise in einer Lokalkultur des Himalayas. Frankfurt: Suhrkamp.Google Scholar
Orell, J. H. (1786). Vollständige theoretische und praktische Geschichte der Erfindungen. Oder Gedanken über die Gegenstände aller drey Naturreiche, die im menschlichen Leben teils zur Beschäftigung des Körpers, teils auch der Seele beygetragen haben. Zürich.Google Scholar
Pétrequin, P., Cassen, S., Errera, M., Klassen, L., Sheridan, A., and Pétrequin, A. M., eds. (2012). Jade. Grandes haches alpines du Néolithique européen Ve et Ive millénaires av. J.-C. Bd. 1–2. Gray.Google Scholar
Plessing, F. V. L. (1787). Memnonium oder Versuche zur Enthüllung der Geheimnisse des Altertums Bd. 1. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Polanyi, K. (1944) [1977]. The Great Transformation. Politische und ökonomische Ursprünge von Gesellschaften und Wirtschaftssystemen.Google Scholar
Polanyi, K. (1963). Ports of Trade in Early Societies. The Journal of Economic History 23, pp. 3045.Google Scholar
Polanyi, K. (1979). Ökonomie und Gesellschaft.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C. (1973). Before Civilization: The Radiocarbon Revolution and Prehistoric Europe. New York.Google Scholar
Rezepkin, A. D. (2000). Das frühbronzezeitliche Gräberfeld von Klady und die Majkop-Kultur in Nordwestkaukasien. Archäologie in Eurasien 10. Rahden; Westf.Google Scholar
Roscoe, P. (2000). New Guinea Leadership as Ethnographic Analogy: A Critical Review. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 7, pp. 79126.Google Scholar
Rossel, S., Marshall, F., Peters, J., Pilgram, T., Adams, M. D., and O’Connor, D. (2008). Domestication of the Donkey: Timing, Processes, and Indicators. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105, pp. 37153720.Google Scholar
Salavert, A. (2008). Olive Cultivation and Oil Production in Palestine during the Early Bronze Age (3500–2000 B.C.): The Case of Tel Yarmouth, Israel. Vegetation History and Archaeobotany 17, Supplement 1, pp. 5361.Google Scholar
Schunke, T. (2013). Klady-Gölitzsch. Vom Kaukasus nach Mitteldeutschland oder umgekehrt? In Meller, H., ed., 3300 BC. Mysteriöse Steinzeittote und ihre Welt. Halle; Saale, pp. 151155.Google Scholar
Service, E. (1975). Origins of the State and Civilization: The Process of Cultural Evolution. New York.Google Scholar
Šmíd, M. (2008). Der Fund von Kupfergegenständen auf dem Burgwall Rmíz bei Laškov. Pravĕk NŘ 18, pp. 139ff.Google Scholar
Soroceanu, T. (2012). Die Kupfer- und Bronzedepots der frühen und mittleren Bronzezeit in Rumänien. Archaeologia Romanica 5. Cluj Napoca.Google Scholar
Stig Sørensen, M. L. (1990). Handel, udveksling og dansk arkeologi. Overvejelser omkring nye perspektiver. Hikuin 16, pp. 715.Google Scholar
Szeverényi, V. (2013). The Earliest Copper Shaft-Hole Axes in the Carpathian Basin: Interaction, Chronology and Transformations of Meaning. In Anders, A. and Kulcsár, G., eds., Moments in Time: Papers Presented to Pál Raczky on His 60th Birthday. Budapest, pp. 661669.Google Scholar
Testart, A., Jeunesse, C., Baray, L., and Boulestin, B. (2012). Les esclaves des tombes néolithiques. Pour la science 76, pp. 107111.Google Scholar
Trésors, (1886). Trésors archéologiques de l’Armorique occidentale: album en chromolithographie. Publié par la Société d’émulation des Côtes du-Nord. Rennes.Google Scholar
Trifonov, B. A. (2000). Трифонов, Курганы майкопского типа в северо–западном Иране. В: Судьба Ученого. К 100-летию со дня рождения Б. А. Латынина. St Petersburg: pp. 244–278.Google Scholar
Vulpe, A. (1970). Die Äxte und Beile in Rumänien I. Munich.Google Scholar
Warmuth, V., Eriksson, A., Bower, M. A., Canon, J., Cothran, G., Distl, O., Glowatzki-Mullis, M.-L., Hunt, H., Luís, C., do Mar Oom, M., Tupac Yupanqui, I., Zabek, T., and Manica, A. (2011). European Domestic Horses Originated in Two Holocene Refugia. PLoS ONE 6, e18194.Google Scholar

References

Agbe-Davies, A. S., and Bauer, A. A. (2010). Rethinking Trade as a Social Activity: An Introduction. In Bauer, A. A. and Agbe-Davies, A. S., eds., Social Archaeologies of Trade and Exchange: Exploring Relationships among People, Place, and Things. Walnut Creek: Left Coast Press, pp. 1328.Google Scholar
Bérard, B. (2013). In Keegan, W. F., Hofman, C. L., and Rodríguez Ramos, R., eds., The Oxford Handbook of Caribbean Archaeology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 184197.Google Scholar
Bercht, F., Brodsky, E., Farmer, J. A., and Taylor, D., eds. (1997). Taíno: Pre-Columbian Art and Culture from the Caribbean. New York: El Museo del Barrio.Google Scholar
Boomert, A. (2001). Saladoid Sociopolitical Organization. In Richard, G., ed., Proceedings of the XVIII International Congress for Caribbean Archaeology. Vol. 2. Guadeloupe: International Association for Caribbean Archaeology, pp. 5577.Google Scholar
Brughmans, T. (2012). Thinking through Networks: A Review of Formal Network Methods in Archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 20, pp. 623662.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Callaghan, R. T. (2001). Ceramic Age Seafaring and Interaction Potential in the Antilles. Current Anthropology 42, pp. 308313.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Callaghan, R. T. (2003). Comments on the Mainland Origins of the Pre-ceramic Cultures of the Greater Antilles. Latin American Antiquity 14, pp. 323338.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Callaghan, R. T. (2013) Archaeological Views of Caribbean Seafaring. In Keegan, W. F., Hofman, C. L., and Rodríguez Ramos, R., eds., The Oxford Handbook of Caribbean Archaeology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 312328.Google Scholar
Chanlatte Baik, L., and Luis, A. (1981). La Hueca y Sorcé (Vieques, Puerto Rico): Primeras migraciones agroalfareras antillanas. Santo Domingo: Published by the Author.Google Scholar
Chanlatte Baik, L., and Narganes Storde, Y. (2005). Cultura La Hueca. Museo de Historia Antropología y Arte. Río Piedras: Universidad de Puerto Rico.Google Scholar
Curet, L. A. (2003). Issues on the Diversity and Emergence of Middle-Range Societies of the Ancient Caribbean: A Critique. Journal of Archaeological Research 11, pp. 142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Curet, L. A. (2011). Irving Rouse’s Contribution to American Archaeology: The Case of Migration. In Curet, L. A. and Hauser, M., eds., Islands at the Crossroads: Migration, Seafaring, and Interaction in the Caribbean. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, pp. 1321.Google Scholar
Curet, L. A. (2015). Exchange and Interaction in the Caribbean: The View from Two Objects from the Smithsonian. Paper presented at the 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Francisco, CA.Google Scholar
Dickau, R. (2005). Resource Use, Crop Dispersals, and the Transition to Agriculture in Prehistoric Panama: Evidence from Starch Grains and Macroremains. Unpublished PhD dissertation. Philadelphia: Department of Anthropology, Temple University.Google Scholar
Dickau, R., Ranere, A. J., and Cooke, R. G. (2007). Starch Grain Evidence for the Preceramic Dispersals of Maize and Root Crops into Tropical Dry and Humid Forests of Panama. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 104, pp. 36513656.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fewkes, J. W. (1907). The Aborigines of Porto Rico and the Neighboring Islands. In Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology for 1903–1904, No. 25. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, pp. 1220.Google Scholar
Gell, A. (1998). Art and Agency: An Anthropological Theory. Oxford: Clarendon.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Geurds, A. (2011). The Social in the Circum-Caribbean: Toward a Transcontextual Order. In Hofman, C. L. and van Duijvenbode, A., eds, Communities in Contact: Essays in Archaeology, Ethnohistory and Ethnography of the Amerindian Circum-Caribbean. Leiden: Sidestone Press, pp. 4561.Google Scholar
Geurds, A., and Van Broekhoven, L. N. K. (2010). The Similarity Trap: Engineering the Greater-Caribbean. A Perspective from the Isthmo-Colombian Area. Journal of Caribbean Archaeology, Special Publication Number 3, pp. 5275.Google Scholar
Harlow, G. E., Murphy, A. R, Hozjan, D. J., de Mille, C. N., and Levinson, A. A. (2006). Pre-Columbian Jadeite Axes from Antigua, West Indies. Canadian Mineralogist 44, pp. 305321.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Helms, M. W. (1987). Art Styles and the Interaction Spheres in Central America and the Caribbean: Polished Black Wood in the Greater Antilles. In Drennan, R. D. and Uribe, C. A., eds., Chiefdoms in the Americas. New York: University Press of America.Google Scholar
Hirth, K. G. (1984). Early Exchange in Mesoamerica: An introduction. In Hirth, K. G., ed., Trade and Exchange in Early Mesoamerica. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, pp. 115.Google Scholar
Hodder, I. (1980). Trade and Exchange: Definitions, Identification and Function. In Fry, R. E., ed., Models and Methods in Regional Exchange. SAA Paper No. 1. Washington, DC: Society for American Archaeology, pp. 151156.Google Scholar
Hodder, I., and Orton, C. (1976). Spatial Analysis in Archaeology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Hofman, C. L., and Bright, A. J. (2010). Towards a Pan-Caribbean Perspective of Pre-colonial Mobility and Exchange: Preface to a Special Volume of the Journal of Caribbean Archaeology. Journal of Caribbean Archaeology, Special Publication No. 3, pp. iiii.Google Scholar
Hofman, C. L., and Hoogland, M. L. P. (2011). Unravelling the Multi-scale Networks of Mobility and Exchange in the Pre-Colonial Circum-Caribbean. In Hofman, C. L. and van Duijvenbode, A., eds., Communities in Contact: Essays in Archaeology, Ethnohistory and Ethnography of the Amerindian Circum-Caribbean. Leiden: Sidestone Press, pp. 1544.Google Scholar
Hoopes, J. W., and Fonseca, Z. O. (2003). Goldwork and Chibchan Identity: Endogenous Change and Diffuse Unity in the Isthmo-Colombian Area. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks.Google Scholar
Kerchache, J. (1994). L’Art Taïno. Paris: Musee du Petit Palais.Google Scholar
Lave, J., and Wenger, E. (1991). Situated Learning: Legitimate Peripheral Participation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
McIntosh, R. J. (1998). The People of the Middle Niger: The Island of Gold. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Mason, J. A. (1941). A Large Archaeological Site at Capá, Utuado, with Notes on Other Puerto Rican Sites Visited in 1914–15. Scientific Survey of Porto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Vol. 18, pt. 2. New York: New York Academy of Science.Google Scholar
Oberg, K. (1955). Types of Social Structure among the Lowland Tribes of South and Central America. American Anthropologist 57:3, pp. 472487.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oka, R., and Kusimba, C. M. (2008). The Archaeology of Trading Systems, Part 1: Towards a New Trade Synthesis. Journal of Archaeological Research 16:4, pp. 339395.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Oliver, J. R. (2009). Caciques and Cemí Idols: The Web Spun by Taíno Rulers between Hispaniola and Puerto Rico. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.Google Scholar
Oliver, J. R., McEwan, C., and Casas Gilberga, A., eds. (2008). El Caribe precolombino: Fray Ramón Pané y el universo taíno. Barcelona: Co-edition of the Ministerio de Cultura, Ajuntament de Barcelona-Institut de Cultura, Museu Barbier Mueller, and Fundación Caixa Galicia.Google Scholar
Pagán-Jiménez, J. R. (2013). Human-Plant Dynamics in the Pre-Colonial Antilles. In Keegan, W. F., Hofman, C. L., and Rodríguez Ramos, R., eds., The Oxford Handbook of Caribbean Archaeology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 391406.Google Scholar
Pagán-Jímenez, J. R., Rodríguez López, M. A., Chanlatte-Baik, L. A., and Narganes Storde, Y. (2005). La temprana introducción y uso de algunas plantas domésticas, silvestres y cultivos en Las Antillas precolombinas: Una primera revaloración desde la perspectiva del “arcaico” de Vieques y Puerto Rico. Diálogo Antropológico, 3:10, pp. 733.Google Scholar
Pagán-Jiménez, J. R., Rodríguez Ramos, J. R., Reid, B. A., van den Bel, M., and Hofman, C. L. (2015). Early Dispersals of Maize and Other Food Plants into the Southern Caribbean and Northeastern South America. Quaternary Science Reviews 123, pp. 231246Google Scholar
Piperno, D. R., and Pearsall, D. M. (1998). The Origins of Agriculture in the Lowland Neotropics. San Diego: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Polanyi, K. (1975). Traders and Trade. In Sabloff, J. A. and Lamberg-Karlovsky, C. C., eds., Ancient Civilization and Trade. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, pp. 133154.Google Scholar
Renfrew, C. (1975). Trade as Action at a Distance: Questions of Integration and Communication. In Sabloff, J. A. and Lamberg-Karlovsky, C. C., eds., Ancient Civilization and Trade. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, pp. 359.Google Scholar
Rodríguez López, M. A. (1997). Maruca, Ponce. In Fontán, A. Rivera, ed., Ocho trabajos de investigación arqueológica en Puerto Rico: Segundo encuentro de investigadores San Juan. Puerto Rico: Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña, pp. 1730.Google Scholar
Rodríguez López, M. A. (1999). Excavations at Maruca, a Preceramic Site in Southern Puerto Rico. In Winter, J. H., ed., Proceedings of the Seventeenth Congress of the International Association for Caribbean Archaeology. Rockville Centre: Molloy College, pp. 166180.Google Scholar
Rodríguez Ramos, R. (2005). The Function of Edge-Ground Cobble Put to the Test. Journal of Caribbean Archaeology 5, pp. 122.Google Scholar
Rodríguez Ramos, R. (2010a). Rethinking Puerto Rican Prehistory. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.Google Scholar
Rodríguez Ramos, R. (2010b). What Is the Caribbean: An Archaeological Perspective. Journal of Caribbean Archaeology, Special Publication No. 3, pp. 1951Google Scholar
Rodríguez Ramos, R. (2011a). The Circulation of Jadeitite across the Caribbeanscape. In Hofman, C. L. and van Duijvenbode, A., eds., Communities in Contact: Essays in Archaeology, Ethnohistory & Ethnography of the Amerindian Circum-Caribbean. Leiden: Sidestone Press, pp. 117136.Google Scholar
Rodríguez Ramos, R. (2011b). Close Encounters of the Caribbean Kind. In Curet, L. A. and Hauser, M. W., eds., Islands at the Crossroads: Migration, Seafaring, and Interaction in the Caribbean. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press.Google Scholar
Rodríguez Ramos, R. (2013). Isthmo-Antillean Engagements. In Keegan, W. F., Hofman, C. L., and Rodríguez Ramos, R., eds., The Oxford Handbook of Caribbean Archaeology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 155170.Google Scholar
Rouse, I. (1964). Prehistory of the West Indies. Science 144, pp. 499513.Google Scholar
Rouse, I. (1982). Ceramic and Religious Development in the Greater Antilles. Journal of New World Archaeology 5, pp. 4555.Google Scholar
Rouse, I. (1986). Migrations in Prehistory: Inferring Population Movement from Cultural Remains. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Rouse, I. (1992). The Tainos: Rise and Decline of the People Who Greeted Columbus. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Service, E. R. (1962). Primitive Social Organization: An Evolutionary Perspective. New York: Random House.Google Scholar
Stein, G. J. (2002). From Passive Periphery to Active Agents: Emerging Perspectives in the Archaeology of Interregional Interaction: Archeology Division Distinguished Lecture AAA Annual Meeting, Philadelphia, December 5, 1998. American Anthropologist 104:3, pp. 903916.Google Scholar
Steward, J. H. (1948). Cultural Areas of the Tropical Forests. In Steward, J. H., ed., Handbook of South American Indians, Vol. 3, The Circum-Caribbean Tribes. Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 143. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, pp. 883889.Google Scholar
Ulloa Hung, J. (2014). Arqueología en la línea noroeste de La Española: Paisaje, cerámicas e interacciones. Santo Domingo: Instituto Tecnológico de Santo Domingo.Google Scholar
Veloz Maggiolo, M., and Angulo Valdés, C. (1982). La aparición de un ídolo de tres puntas en la tradición Malambo (Colombia). Boletín del Museo del Hombre Dominicano 17, pp. 1117.Google Scholar
Wilson, S. E., Iceland, H. B., and Hester, T. R. (1998) Preceramic Connections between Yucatán and the Caribbean. Latin American Antiquity 9, pp. 342352.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×