
doi: 10.1002/evan.20113
AbstractThe Neolithic period of the southern Levant was an era of tremendous change. Over the course of the Neolithic, the gradual transition from foraging to agriculture involved not merely economic innovations, but also profound shifts in population size, social organization, and technology. This represents possibly the earliest, and certainly one of the earliest, instances of the transition to agriculture. The advent of farming altered human demography, health, and diversity; it shaped the spread of the world's dominant cultures, genes, and languages.1, 2 It recast humans' relationship with the natural world, increasing modification of the environment. It both enabled and required the development of new social structures as humans learned how to live in increasingly large and densely packed groups.These transformations were not easily achieved. This paper traces the development of the southern Levantine Neolithic through two thousand years of socioeconomic elaboration and expansion; a major social recalibration in the middle Neolithic; and a final millennium‐and‐a‐half of smaller‐scale and materially simpler adaptations.
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