Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

First Migrants: Ancient Migration in Global Perspective, Revised edition 2nd edition [Pehme köide]

(Australian National University)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 352 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 226x152x25 mm, kaal: 454 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1394202415
  • ISBN-13: 9781394202416
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Pehme köide
  • Hind: 44,78 €
  • See raamat ei ole veel ilmunud. Raamatu kohalejõudmiseks kulub orienteeruvalt 3-4 nädalat peale raamatu väljaandmist.
  • Kogus:
  • Lisa ostukorvi
  • Tasuta tarne
  • Tellimisaeg 2-4 nädalat
  • Lisa soovinimekirja
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 352 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 226x152x25 mm, kaal: 454 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1394202415
  • ISBN-13: 9781394202416
Teised raamatud teemal:
How Our Restless Ancestors Shaped the Interconnected World We Live in Today

First Migrants Revisited: Ancient Migration in Global Perspective reveals how human and hominin migrations over the past five million years shaped the world we inhabit today. Peter Bellwood synthesises insights from archaeology, palaeoanthropology, genetics, and linguistics to trace humanitys earliest movements from the first African expansions to the global spread of agriculture. The book reveals how migration redistributed the results of biological and cultural evolution, transforming societies and environments in every corner of the globe.

Bringing together decades of scholarship, Bellwood challenges simplistic narratives of ancient migration as random events without cause or consequence, instead positioning it as a powerful mechanism the behind the formation and spread of new patterns in human biology and culture. Through rich interdisciplinary analysis, he shows how the permanent movements of populations created enduring patterns of genetic, linguistic, and cultural diversity that continue to define us. Covering the migrations of early hominins, Homo sapiens dispersals across continents, and the global diffusion of agriculture, the book provides a richly interdisciplinary account of humanitys shared past, drawing clear connections between environmental change, demographic expansion, and the human impulse to explore.

Deepening our understanding of migration as one of the most enduring forces in human history, First Migrants Revisited:





Reinterprets migration as a dynamic process of redistribution of human biology, culture, and language Highlights the enduring consequences of prehistoric migration for contemporary human societies Provides new insights into the large-scale population movements that shaped the genetic, cultural, and linguistic diversity that still characterizes humanity today Features accessible summaries of the latest findings on early Homo sapiens dispersals and the global spread of agriculture Includes comparative discussions of different hominin species and their adaptive strategies

First Migrants Revisited: Ancient Migration in Global Perspective is ideally suited for upper-level undergraduate and postgraduate courses in archaeology, anthropology, human evolution, and historical linguistics, as well as for modules in global history, evolutionary biology, and population genetics within BA, BSc, and MA degree programmes.
List of Figures xi

List of Table xiii

Preface xiv

A Note on Dating Terminology xvii

Acknowledgments xix

1 Prehistoric Human Migration and Why It Mattered 1

Migration as a Cyclical Phenomenon Punctuations and Quiescence 2

Defining Ancient Migration 6

Migration Versus Conquest and Elite Dominance as Vectors of Human
Dispersal 8

Potential Reasons for Ancient Migration 9

Researching Ancient Migration at the Level of the Biological Population 10

Language Families and Historical Linguistics 13

When and How Did Language Families Originate and Spread? 17

Cultures in Archaeology Did They Equate with Linguistic and Biological
Populations? 20

On Triangulating Opinions from Different Disciplines 21

2 Migrations in History and Anthropology A Consideration of Outcomes 24

Settling Uninhabited New Lands Medieval Iceland, and the Bounty Survivors
on Pitcairn Island 25

Ancient China: Imperial Conquest with Mass Settlement of Previously
Inhabited Territory 26

The Anglo-Saxons in England: Success in Migration Where the Romans Failed
28

The Nuer and Dinka of Sudan: Demic Diffusion Between Neighbors Fueled by
Imbalances in Raiding Group Size and Bride Price Demands 31

The Iban of Sarawak and the Yanomami of Venezuela: Population Growth in
Tribal Circumstances and a Constant Need for New Land 32

Roman Britain: Imperial Conquest and Major Cultural Change, but No Mass
Settler Immigration 34

Indic-influenced Southeast Asia: Religious and Cultural Influence, but No
Mass Settler Immigration 35

The Helvetii: A Failed Attempt at a Planned Migration 36

The Relevance of Historical and Ethnographic Migrations for Understanding
Prehistoric Situations 37

Notes 41

3 Migrating Hominins, Until the Emergence of Homo Sapiens 42

How Did Species Originate and Migrate? 42

The First Hominins 44

The Issue of Inter-Species Hybridization 48

Early Hominins and Migration in Africa 51

Out of Africa, But How Often? 54

Who Were the First Hominin Migrants beyond Africa? 59

Flores, Luzon, and Crossing the Sea 62

Large Brained Hominins of the Middle Pleistocene Out of Africa Again? 65

Neanderthals and Denisovans 68

Stone Tools and Hominin Species Did They Correlate? 70

Taking Stock 72

4 Early Homo Sapiens in Africa and Eurasia 74

Where and When Did Homo sapiens Originate? 74

What Was, and Still Is, Homo sapiens? 77

Behavioral Modernity 81

Eurasia and Africa in Comparative Perspective 82

The Expansion of Modern Humans Across Africa 84

Out of Africa When? 85

The Environments Behind Homo sapiens Migration into Eurasia 87

The Upper Paleolithic in Eurasia 91

Ancient Genetic Perspectives on Upper Paleolithic Eurasians 95

The Crossings of Asia 96

The Fates of the Neanderthals and Denisovans 97

5 Early Homo sapiens Offshore: Island Southeast Asia, Australia, New Guinea,
Japan, and The Americas 101

The Southern Route to the East 101

Homo sapiens Arrives in Sahul, But When? 102

How Did People Reach Australia and New Guinea? 106

How Many Settlers? 108

Heading North and Offshore Again Japan 110

The Americas 114

Getting to and Through Beringia 116

The Genetic Sources of the First Americans 118

The Rapid Unfolding of American Colonization 120

Paleo-Inuit and Thule Inuit Migrations 123

The Apache and the Navajo of the US Southwest 126

6 Last Hunter-Gatherers, First Farmers, and the Warming of the Earth 129

Goodbye to the Last Glacial Maximum, Welcome to the Holocene 129

Food Production, the First Farmers, and Their Fecund Offspring 134

Why Did Food Production Develop in Some Places, But Not Others? 139

Why Was Domesticated Food Production Relatively Slow to Develop? 141

Food Production and Population Expansion 143

7 Ancient Farming Migrations in Western Eurasia and Northern Africa 149

Agricultural Beginnings in the Fertile Crescent 152

Migrations Out of the Fertile Crescent 156

Neolithic Expansion from Anatolia into Southeastern Europe 158

Neolithic Migration Through Europe, Beyond Greece and the Balkans 161

The Eurasian Steppes, Central Asia, and Towards the Indian Subcontinent 165

Iran, Pakistan, and South Asia Beyond the Indus River 168

The Spread of the Fertile Crescent Food-Producing Economy into North Africa
171

Genomic Perspectives on the Fertile Crescent Food Production Complex 174

Genomic Expansions Out of the Fertile Crescent 175

The Indo-European Language Family Origins and Dispersals 180

Peninsular India and the Dravidian Language Family 183

Northern Africa and the Afro-Asiatic

Language Family 185

Notes 188

8 Ancient Farming Migrations in Eastern Asia and Oceania 189

Eastern Asian Topography and Its Effect on Human Migration 189

Agricultural Beginnings in East Asia 192

Who Were the First Farmers of East Asia? 194

One Beginning, or Two, or More? 198

Neolithic Migrations from the Central and Northern Chinese Riverine Plains
200

Sino-Tibetan and Transeurasian Migrations from the Liao and Yellow Rivers
202

Southern China and Mainland Southeast Asia 204

A Key Archaeological Sequence from Northern Vietnam 209

The Austroasiatic and Kra-Dai (Tai-Kadai, or Daic) Language Families 211

Island Southeast Asia and Oceania, and the Role of the New Guinea Highlands
214

Archaeological and Genetic Migrations Through Island Southeast Asia, New
Guinea, and Oceania 219

The Colonization of Oceania Beyond New Guinea and the Solomons 224

Holocene Australia and Its Migration Puzzles 229

9 Ancient Farming Migrations in Sub-Saharan Africa and the Americas 232

Africa Before Food Production 233

Africa with Food Production 234

Sub-Saharan Crop Domestication 236

The Bantu Expansion 238

Independent Cultural Developments and Migrations in the Americas 241

The Rise of Food Production in the Americas, Especially Maize 246

Food Production and Migration in the Americas 248

Early Farmers in Ecuador and Peru 251

Early Farmers in Amazonia 252

The Caribbean Islands 254

Mesoamerica and the US Southwest 255

The Eastern Woodlands of North America 259

Notes 260

10 What Happened in (Pre)History(?) 262

Global Hominin Prehistory and Migratory Punctuation A Review 262

Some Further Questions 266

References 269

Index 000
PETER BELLWOOD is Emeritus Professor at the Australian National University. An International Fellow of the British Academy and Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities, he is internationally recognised for his research on human population history in Southeast Asia and the Pacific. His previous publications with Wiley Blackwell include First Farmers, First Migrants, First Islanders, and The Global Prehistory of Human Migration. In 2021, he was awarded the International Cosmos Prize in Osaka, Japan.