Problems of Recognizing Earliest Sedentism

The Natufian Example

Authors

  • Philip C. Edwards University of Sydney

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v2i1.5

Keywords:

Sedentism, Natufian, semi-mobile

Abstract

Natufian period settlements have been proposed as key examples of pre-agricultural sedentism. This paper examines that proposition and concludes that Natufian residential sites are as likely to represent the residues of a semi-mobile mode of settlement. However, the main point to be made here is that a rigorous methodology for distinguishing between the prehistoric settlement remains of sedentary, semi-mobile and mobile hunter-gatherers is lacking. Investigation into the rates at which sedimentation occurs, and into the practice of superposition of building units in both ethnographic transhumant and sedentary villages is seen as a fruitful avenue of research on this subject.

Author Biography

  • Philip C. Edwards, University of Sydney
    Philip C. Edwards is a Post-doctoral Fellow in the Department of Archaeology, University of Sydney. He was born in 1955 and educated at Monash University (B.S.c, 1976), and the University of Sydney (B.A. hons., 1981; PhD., 1988). From 1988 he has been engaged in excavating a series of Middle, Upper and Epi-Paleolithic occupations in Wadi al-Hammeh, near Pella in Jordan. Periodical reports on this work regularly appear in Annual of the Department of Antiquaries of Jordan.

Published

1989-06-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Edwards, P. C. (1989). Problems of Recognizing Earliest Sedentism: The Natufian Example. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology, 2(1), 5-48. https://doi.org/10.1558/jmea.v2i1.5