Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5113745 | Quaternary International | 2017 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Here we report on a simulation developed to evaluate if, and under what conditions, the early 'Out of Africa' dispersal could lead to such a demographic pattern. The model comprises a dynamic environmental reconstruction of Old World vegetation in the timeframe 2.5-0.25Â Ma coupled with a standard biological model of population growth and dispersal. The spatial distribution of population density is recorded over the course of the simulation. We demonstrate that, under a wide sweep of both environmental and behavioural parameter values, and across a range of scenarios that vary the role of disease and the availability of alternative crossing points between Africa, Europe and Asia, the demographic consequence of dispersal is not a gradual attenuation of the population size away from the point of origin but a pattern of ecologically driven local variation in population density. The methodology presented opens a new route to understand the phenomenon of the Movius Line and other large-scale spatio-temporal patterns in the archaeological record and provides a new insight into the debate on the relationship between demographics and cultural complexity. This study also highlights the potential of simulation studies for testing complex conceptual models and the importance of building reference frameworks based on known proxies in order to achieve more rigorous model development in Palaeolithic archaeology and beyond.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Iza Romanowska, Clive Gamble, Seth Bullock, Fraser Sturt,