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Clive Gamble

Personal Information

Born May 10, 1951 (74 years old)
United Kingdom
Also known as: Clive Stephen Gamble
11 books
4.5 (11)
11 readers

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Books

Newest First

Archaeology, the basics

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"Fully updated, Archaeology: The Basics 2nd edition has been revised to reflect growth in areas such as material culture, human evolution and the political use of the past." "From everyday examples to the more obscure, this is essential reading for all students, independent archaeologists and all those who want to know more about archaeological thought, history and practice."--Jacket.

The palaeolithic settlement of Europe

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"In this book Clive Gamble challenges the established view that the social life of Europeans over the 500,000 years of the European Palaeolithic must remain a mystery. In the past forty years archaeologists have recovered a wealth of information from sites throughout the continent. Professor Gamble now introduces a new approach to this material. He interrogates the archaeological evidence from stone tools, hunting and campsites for information on the scale of social interaction, and the forms of social life. Taking a pan-European view of the archaeological evidence, he reconstructs ancient human societies, and introduces new perspectives on the unique social experience of human beings."--Jacket.

Settling the Earth

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"In this worldwide survey, Clive Gamble explores the evolution of the human imagination, without which we would not have become a global species. He sets out to determine the cognitive and social basis for our imaginative capacity and traces the evidence back into deep human history. He argues that it was the imaginative ability to "go beyond" and to create societies where people lived apart yet stayed in touch that made us such effective world settlers. To make his case Gamble brings together information from a wide range of disciplines: psychology, cognitive science, archaeology, palaeoanthropology, archaeogenetics, geography, quaternary science and anthropology. He presents a novel deep history that combines the archaeological evidence for fossil hominins with the selective forces of Pleistocene climate change, engages with the archaeogeneticists' models for population dispersal and displacement, and ends with the Europeans' rediscovery of the deep history settlement of the earth"--