When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Subsistence pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subsistence_pattern

    Foraging is the oldest subsistence pattern, with all human societies relying on it until approximately 10,000 years ago. [2] Foraging societies obtain the majority of their resources directly from the environment without cultivation. Also known as Hunter-gatherers, foragers may subsist through collecting wild plants, hunting, or fishing. [1]

  3. Hunter-gatherer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunter-gatherer

    Pygmy hunter-gatherers in the Congo Basin in August 2014. A hunter-gatherer or forager is a human living in a community, or according to an ancestrally derived lifestyle, in which most or all food is obtained by foraging, [1] [2] that is, by gathering food from local naturally occurring sources, especially wild edible plants but also insects, fungi, honey, bird eggs, or anything safe to eat ...

  4. Foraging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foraging

    Solitary foraging includes the variety of foraging in which animals find, capture and consume their prey alone. Individuals can manually exploit patches or they can use tools to exploit their prey. For example, Bolas spiders attack their prey by luring them with a scent identical to the female moth's sex pheromones. [ 16 ]

  5. Shattering the myth of men as hunters and women as gatherers

    www.aol.com/women-hunter-gatherer-groups-defied...

    But new research finds women in foraging societies were often bringing home the bacon (and other prey, too). Hunting was once thought to belong to the domain of men. But new research finds women ...

  6. Adaptive strategies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adaptive_strategies

    For example, there are clear similarities among societies that have a foraging (hunting and gathering) strategy. Cohen developed a typology of societies based on correlations between their economies and their social features. His typology includes these five adaptive strategies: foraging, horticulture, agriculture, pastoralism, and industrialism.

  7. Original affluent society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Original_affluent_society

    By foraging only for their immediate needs among plentiful resources, hunter-gatherers are able to increase the amount of leisure time available to them. Thus, despite living in what western society deems to be material poverty, hunter-gatherer societies work less than people practicing other modes of subsistence while still providing for all ...

  8. Broad spectrum revolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broad_spectrum_revolution

    A BSR is likely to manifest as both an increased spectrum of food resources and an evenness in the exploitation of high- and low-value prey. Under a broad spectrum economy a greater amount of low-value prey (i.e. high cost-to-benefit ratio) would be included because there are insufficient high-value prey to reliably satisfy a population's needs.

  9. Primitive communism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primitive_communism

    Alain Testart and others have said that anthropologists should be careful when using research on current hunter-gatherer societies to determine the structure of societies in the paleolithic, where viewing current hunter-gatherer communities as "the most ancient of so-called primitive societies" is likely due to appearances and perceptions and ...