Ice Age Humans (30,000 Years Ago)

L. Newson, P. Richerson
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Abstract

Starting about 35,000 years ago, humans seem to have made a great leap forward culturally. The authors argue that this wasn’t because of genetic changes that caused the human brain to have increased capacity. It was because some groups culturally evolved the “social tools” that allowed them to maintain connections and share information over long distances. The groups with the most effective social tools managed to stay connected and to survive, and their descendants inherited this culture of connectedness. It’s likely that forming greater connectedness and more complex culture was necessary in order to survive the periods of high climate variability that were a feature of the last ice age.
冰河时代的人类(3万年前)
从大约35000年前开始,人类似乎在文化上取得了巨大的飞跃。作者认为,这并不是因为基因变化导致了人类大脑容量的增加。这是因为一些群体在文化上进化出了“社交工具”,使他们能够保持联系,并在远距离分享信息。拥有最有效的社会工具的群体设法保持联系并生存下来,他们的后代继承了这种联系文化。很可能形成更大的联系和更复杂的文化是必要的,以便在气候高度变化的时期生存下来,这是上一个冰河时代的一个特征。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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