000 02073nab a2200325 4500
001 MUSEF-HEM-PPE-091222
003 BO-LP-MUSEF
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008 230602b1982 us ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aBO-LpMNE
041 _aeng
092 _sE
_aAMER-ANT/vol.47(3)/ Jul.1982
100 1 _aBraun, David P.
245 _aEvolution of "tribal" social networks: theory and prehistoric North American evidence.
_cDavid P. Braun
260 _aEstados Unidos-US :
_bSociety for American Archaeology,
_c1982.
300 _a504-525 páginas:
_bilustraciones en blanco y negro.
310 _aTrimestral
362 _avol.47; n.3 (Jul.1982)
490 _3American Antiquity. Journal of the Society for American Archaeology ;
_ano.3
520 _aThis paper addresses two topics central to the study of nonhierarchical, regional social networks sometimes termed "tribal" social networks: 1) alternative models of the evolution of regional integration: and 2) the archaeological determination of characteristics of such regional networks. Problems in previous ethnological and archaeological studies are identified, and an alternative model is proposed. this is based on a more general theory of organizational processes in nonhierarchical social systems. Data from the prehistoric North American Southwest and Midwest are shown to support the more general model, which treats such networks as organizational responses to increasing environmental uncertainty occasioned by either cultural or physical ecological factors, or both.
653 _aANTROPOLGIA
653 _aRELACIONES DE PODER
700 _aPlog, Stephen
773 0 _0302582
_976641
_aSociety for American Archaeology
_dEstados Unidos-US : Society for American Archaeology, 1982.
_oHEMREV012017
_tAmerican Antiquity. Journal of the Society for American Archaeology;
_w(BO-LP-MUSEF)MUSEF-HEM-PPE-091220
810 _aSoociety for American Archaeology.
850 _aBO-LpMNE
866 _a1
942 _2ddc
_cPPE
_dCON
_j011
999 _c302611