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Lawrence H. Keeley

Lawrence H. Keeley (August 24, 1948 – October 11, 2017) was an American archaeologist best known for pioneering the field of microwear analysis of lithics.[3][4] He is also known for his 1996 book, War Before Civilization: The Myth of the Peaceful Savage. Keeley worked as a professor of archaeology at the University of Illinois Chicago.[1][5]

Lawrence H. Keeley
BornAugust 24, 1948
Cupertino, California, US
DiedOctober 11, 2017(2017-10-11) (aged 69)[1]
Occupationarchaeologist
AwardsSociety for American Archaeology's Award for Excellence in Lithic Studies[2]
Academic background
Alma materSan Jose State University (B.A., 1970)
University of Oregon (M.A., 1972)
Oxford University (Ph.D., 1977)
ThesisAn experimental study of Microwear traces on selected British Palaeolithic implements (1977)
Academic work
DisciplineArchaeology
Sub-disciplinePrehistoric archaeology
Experimental archaeology
Lithics
InstitutionsUniversity of Illinois Chicago

Early life edit

Keeley was born and raised in Cupertino, California, where he attended Cupertino High School. After high school, he went on to earn his B.A. in Anthropology from San José State University in 1970. Keeley initially pursued graduate education at the University of Oregon, but his professors encouraged him to enroll in a British university. After transferring, Keeley earned his Ph.D. in Archaeology at the University of Oxford in 1977.[5]

Career edit

Keeley had a short postdoctoral appointment at Musée royal de l'Afrique centrale in 1977. He began his academic career at the University of Illinois Chicago the following year. Keeley was promoted to assistant professor in 1984, and reached full professor in 1991. He retained this position until his 2014 retirement.[5][1]

Microwear Analysis edit

With the use of high magnification ... one can almost always isolate the used portion of the tool and reconstruct its movement during use, as well as, in the majority of cases, determine exactly which material was being worked.

— Lawrence H. Keeley, Experimental Determination of Stone Tool Uses: A Microwear Analysis (1980), p.78.

Keeley's most noted contribution to the fields of Paleolithic archaeology and experimental archaeology was his development and defense of microwear analysis in the study of stone tools and hominid behavioral reconstruction.[6] Microwear analysis is one of two primary methods (the other being use-wear analysis) for identifying the functions of artifact tools. Both methods rely on examination of the smoothed down sections of blades, called "polishes," formed on the working edges of lithics. Microwear differs from use-wear because of the scale at which the analysis happens; microwear analysis is the use of microscopy to evaluate and understand these polishes.[7] Keeley is considered to be a pioneer of microwear analysis, and microwear analysis has become a vital method of archaeological research.[8][3]

The primary way that Keeley demonstrated the efficacy of microwear analysis was through the Keeley–Newcomer blind test.[5] The methodology of this test was similar to other early microwear experiments, and it consisted of attempting to correctly determine tool function from analysis of lithics made and used by a researcher. The Keeley-Newcomer test differed from prior tests though because the tools were made and used by a researcher, Mark Newcomer, independent of the archaeologist, Lawrence Keeley. Keeley took up this test as a challenge from Mark Newcomer, a lecturer at London University's Institute of Archaeology and a skeptic of microwear analysis, to demonstrate the reliability of the method.[9] Running a blind test granted their results objectivity and turned the experiment into an argument for the general use of microwear analysis in archaeological research. As a result of these original results and similar tests, microwear has enjoyed consistent use and development across the field of Paleolithic archaeology since 1977.[3][10]

Despite Keeley's successful identification of the majority of the lithics provided by Newcomer and subsequent similar blind tests by other archaeologists, Newcomer wrote critically of microwear analysis in 1986. He wrote of a series of blind tests run by London University, "there has been no convincing demonstration that anyone can consistently identify worked materials by polish type alone."[11] However, other archaeologists have defended Keeley's contribution and even criticized Newcomer's skepticism.[12][13]

Koobi Fora study edit

Keeley worked with Nicholas Toth in 1981 to analyze oldowan tools from Koobi Fora, Kenya. Using microwear and use-wear analysis, the pair narrowed their research to 54 lithic flakes from among the oldowan, which they used to understand the at least 1.4 million year-old civilization. Nine of these 54 exhibited signs of wear in their analysis, which involved high power microscopy at 50-400x magnification.[14] Keeley discovered that these nine flakes, which would have been overlooked by most traditional studies, were actually used as stone tools themselves and were not simply debitage from the creation of lithic cores.[15] Their conclusion was that flakes themselves were the desired tool in lithic reduction, which was supported by their identification of flakes used for butchery, woodworking, and standard cutting of plant matter.[16] At the time of publishing, this use theory ran counter to a competing theory that lithic cores were the primary intended tools.[17] Since publishing, however, their theories have become widely known and have found support in several other studies. Their joint study was published in Nature and has been widely cited as an example of hominid behavioral reconstruction.[5]

Toth later hypothesized that these flake tools were likely to have initially been created accidentally from the creation of cores but later became the desired result instead of cores. He also stated that the development of flake tools was crucial in the evolution of human intelligence, a theory that has found support even outside of archaeology.[7][18][19]

War Before Civilization edit

 
According to War before Civilization, modern western societies are significantly less violent than various historical groups.

Keeley's best known work is War Before Civilization: The Myth of the Peaceful Savage, published by the Oxford University Press in 1996. This book was an empirical rebuttal of the popular romantic anthropological idea of the "noble savage."[4] Keeley's core thesis is that western academics had "pacified" history, especially relating to the role of violence in the history of human development, and that overall death rates in modern societies were remarkably lower than among small-scale Paleolithic groups. War Before Civilization reinvigorated classic arguments regarding human nature, largely inspired by Thomas Hobbes and Jean-Jacques Rousseau's perspectives on the subject. This book also initiated a renewed interdisciplinary interest in war in the context of sociocultural evolution, which lasted through the latter 1990s.[20][21][22]

The findings of this book have been the subject of some criticism, including a short 2014 article reprinted by Indian Country Today.[23] Keith F. Otterbein, an anthropology professor, criticized Keeley's book in American Anthropologist, explaining that Keeley was right to identify two competing theories on human nature, but that he did not capture the full scope of historical developments by disregarding the idea of peaceful prehistoric hominids. Neil L. Whitehead, another notable anthropologist and someone identified by Keeley[citation needed] as a proponent of the myth of the peaceful savage, sympathized with Otterbein but saw other ways to challenge Keeley's "peculiar view" of anthropology.[24][25]

Books edit

  • Experimental Determination of Stone Tool Uses: A Microwear Analysis (University of Chicago Press, 1980); ISBN 978-0226428895
  • War Before Civilization: The Myth of the Peaceful Savage (Oxford University Press, 1996); ISBN 978-0195091120

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Deaths: Lawrence Keeley". November 28, 2017. Retrieved May 16, 2022.
  2. ^ "Lawrence H. Keeley, PhD". Retrieved May 16, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c Dunmore, Christopher J.; Pateman, Ben; Key, Alastair (March 2018). "A citation network analysis of lithic microwear research" (PDF). Journal of Archaeological Science. 91: 33–42. Bibcode:2018JArSc..91...33D. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2018.01.006.
  4. ^ a b Renfrew, Colin; Bahn, Paul G (2016). Archaeology: Theories, Methods, and Practice (7th ed.). Thames and Hudson. pp. 220–221. ISBN 9780500292105.
  5. ^ a b c d e Yerkes, Richard (24 July 2019). "Lawrence H. Keeley's contributions to the use of microwear analysis in reconstructions of past human behavior (1972–2017)". Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. 27. Department of Anthropology, Ohio State University: 101937. Bibcode:2019JArSR..27j1937Y. doi:10.1016/j.jasrep.2019.101937. S2CID 199933153. Retrieved May 16, 2022.
  6. ^ Odell, George Hamley (1975). "Micro-Wear in Perspective: A Sympathetic Response to Lawrence H. Keeley". World Archaeology. 7 (2): 226–40. doi:10.1080/00438243.1975.9979635. JSTOR 124041. Retrieved May 16, 2022.
  7. ^ a b Toth, Nicholas (April 1987). "The First Technology". Scientific American. 256 (4): 112–121. Bibcode:1987SciAm.256d.112T. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican0487-112. ISSN 0036-8733.
  8. ^ Shea, John J. (1992). "Lithic microwear analysis in archeology". Evolutionary Anthropology. 1 (4): 143–150. doi:10.1002/evan.1360010407. S2CID 84924296.
  9. ^ Keeley, Lawrence H.; Newcomer, Mark H. (1977). "Microwear analysis of experimental flint tools: a test case". Journal of Archaeological Science. 4 (1): 29–62. Bibcode:1977JArSc...4...29K. doi:10.1016/0305-4403(77)90111-X. ISSN 0305-4403.
  10. ^ Ollé, Andreu; Borel, Antony; Vergès Bosch, Josep Maria; Sala, Robert (2014). "Scanning Electron and Optical Light Microscopy: two complementary approaches for the understanding and interpretation of usewear and residues on stone tools". Journal of Archaeological Science. 48: 46–59. Bibcode:2014JArSc..48...46B. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2013.06.031. ISSN 0305-4403.
  11. ^ Newcomer, Mark; Grace, R.; Unger-Hamilton, R. (1986). "Investigating microwear polishes with blind tests". Journal of Archaeological Science. 13 (3): 203–217. Bibcode:1986JArSc..13..203N. doi:10.1016/0305-4403(86)90059-2. ISSN 0305-4403.
  12. ^ Moss, Emily H. (1987). "A review of "Investigating microwear polishes with blind tests"". Journal of Archaeological Science. 14 (5): 473–481. Bibcode:1987JArSc..14..473M. doi:10.1016/0305-4403(87)90033-1. ISSN 0305-4403.
  13. ^ Bamforth, Douglas B. (1988). "Investigating microwear polishes with blind tests: The institute results in context". Journal of Archaeological Science. 15 (1): 11–23. Bibcode:1988JArSc..15...11B. doi:10.1016/0305-4403(88)90015-5. ISSN 0305-4403.
  14. ^ Herrygers, Christa (2002). "A Comparative Analysis of Wood Residues on Experimental Stone Tools and Early Stone Age Artifacts: A Koobi Fora Case Study". McNair Scholars Journal. 6 (1).
  15. ^ Keeley, Lawrence; Toth, Nicholas (1981). "Microwear polishes on early stone tools from Koobi Fora, Kenya". Nature. 293 (5832): 464–465. Bibcode:1981Natur.293..464K. doi:10.1038/293464a0. S2CID 4233302. Retrieved May 17, 2022.
  16. ^ Toth, Nicholas; Schick, Kathy Diane (1986). "The First Million Years: The Archaeology of Protohuman Culture". Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory. 9: 29. JSTOR 20210075.
  17. ^ Plummer, Thomas (2004). "Flaked stones and old bones: Biological and cultural evolution at the dawn of technology". American Journal of Physical Anthropology. 125 (Supplement 39: Yearbook of Physical Anthropology): 118–164. doi:10.1002/ajpa.20157. ISSN 0002-9483. PMID 15605391.
  18. ^ Toth, Nicholas (1985). "The Oldowan Reassessed: A Close Look at Early Stone Artifacts". Journal of Archaeological Science. 12 (2): 101–120. Bibcode:1985JArSc..12..101T. doi:10.1016/0305-4403(85)90056-1. ISSN 0305-4403.
  19. ^ Cousins, Steven D. (2014). "The semiotic coevolution of mind and culture". Culture & Psychology. 20 (2): 160–191. doi:10.1177/1354067X14532331. S2CID 145519137.
  20. ^ Lawler, Andrew (2012). "The Battle Over Violence". Science. 336 (6083): 829–830. doi:10.1126/science.336.6083.829. ISSN 1095-9203. JSTOR 41584838. PMID 22605751.
  21. ^ Arrow, Holly (2007). "The Sharp End of Altruism". Science. 318 (5850): 581–582. doi:10.1126/science.1150316. ISSN 1095-9203. JSTOR 20051440. PMID 17962546. S2CID 146797279.
  22. ^ Thorpe, I. J. N. (2003). "Anthropology, Archaeology, and the Origin of Warfare". World Archaeology. 35 (1): 145–165. doi:10.1080/0043824032000079198. ISSN 1470-1375. JSTOR 3560217. S2CID 54030253.
  23. ^ Jacobs, Don / Four Arrows (2014). "The Heart of Everything That Isn't: the Untold Story of Anti-Indianism in Drury and Clavin's Book on Red Cloud". Ict News. Retrieved May 17, 2022.
  24. ^ Whitehead, Neil L. (2000). "A History of Research on Warfare in Anthropology - Reply to Keith Otterbein". American Anthropologist. 102 (4): 834–837. doi:10.1525/aa.2000.102.4.834. ISSN 1548-1433. JSTOR 684206.
  25. ^ Otterbein, Keith F. (1999). "A History of Research on Warfare in Anthropology". American Anthropologist. 101 (4): 794–805. doi:10.1525/aa.1999.101.4.794. ISSN 1548-1433. JSTOR 684054.

lawrence, keeley, august, 1948, october, 2017, american, archaeologist, best, known, pioneering, field, microwear, analysis, lithics, also, known, 1996, book, before, civilization, myth, peaceful, savage, keeley, worked, professor, archaeology, university, ill. Lawrence H Keeley August 24 1948 October 11 2017 was an American archaeologist best known for pioneering the field of microwear analysis of lithics 3 4 He is also known for his 1996 book War Before Civilization The Myth of the Peaceful Savage Keeley worked as a professor of archaeology at the University of Illinois Chicago 1 5 Lawrence H KeeleyBornAugust 24 1948Cupertino California USDiedOctober 11 2017 2017 10 11 aged 69 1 OccupationarchaeologistAwardsSociety for American Archaeology s Award for Excellence in Lithic Studies 2 Academic backgroundAlma materSan Jose State University B A 1970 University of Oregon M A 1972 Oxford University Ph D 1977 ThesisAn experimental study of Microwear traces on selected British Palaeolithic implements 1977 Academic workDisciplineArchaeologySub disciplinePrehistoric archaeology Experimental archaeology LithicsInstitutionsUniversity of Illinois Chicago Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Microwear Analysis 2 2 Koobi Fora study 2 3 War Before Civilization 3 Books 4 ReferencesEarly life editKeeley was born and raised in Cupertino California where he attended Cupertino High School After high school he went on to earn his B A in Anthropology from San Jose State University in 1970 Keeley initially pursued graduate education at the University of Oregon but his professors encouraged him to enroll in a British university After transferring Keeley earned his Ph D in Archaeology at the University of Oxford in 1977 5 Career editKeeley had a short postdoctoral appointment at Musee royal de l Afrique centrale in 1977 He began his academic career at the University of Illinois Chicago the following year Keeley was promoted to assistant professor in 1984 and reached full professor in 1991 He retained this position until his 2014 retirement 5 1 Microwear Analysis edit With the use of high magnification one can almost always isolate the used portion of the tool and reconstruct its movement during use as well as in the majority of cases determine exactly which material was being worked Lawrence H Keeley Experimental Determination of Stone Tool Uses A Microwear Analysis 1980 p 78 Keeley s most noted contribution to the fields of Paleolithic archaeology and experimental archaeology was his development and defense of microwear analysis in the study of stone tools and hominid behavioral reconstruction 6 Microwear analysis is one of two primary methods the other being use wear analysis for identifying the functions of artifact tools Both methods rely on examination of the smoothed down sections of blades called polishes formed on the working edges of lithics Microwear differs from use wear because of the scale at which the analysis happens microwear analysis is the use of microscopy to evaluate and understand these polishes 7 Keeley is considered to be a pioneer of microwear analysis and microwear analysis has become a vital method of archaeological research 8 3 The primary way that Keeley demonstrated the efficacy of microwear analysis was through the Keeley Newcomer blind test 5 The methodology of this test was similar to other early microwear experiments and it consisted of attempting to correctly determine tool function from analysis of lithics made and used by a researcher The Keeley Newcomer test differed from prior tests though because the tools were made and used by a researcher Mark Newcomer independent of the archaeologist Lawrence Keeley Keeley took up this test as a challenge from Mark Newcomer a lecturer at London University s Institute of Archaeology and a skeptic of microwear analysis to demonstrate the reliability of the method 9 Running a blind test granted their results objectivity and turned the experiment into an argument for the general use of microwear analysis in archaeological research As a result of these original results and similar tests microwear has enjoyed consistent use and development across the field of Paleolithic archaeology since 1977 3 10 Despite Keeley s successful identification of the majority of the lithics provided by Newcomer and subsequent similar blind tests by other archaeologists Newcomer wrote critically of microwear analysis in 1986 He wrote of a series of blind tests run by London University there has been no convincing demonstration that anyone can consistently identify worked materials by polish type alone 11 However other archaeologists have defended Keeley s contribution and even criticized Newcomer s skepticism 12 13 Koobi Fora study edit Keeley worked with Nicholas Toth in 1981 to analyze oldowan tools from Koobi Fora Kenya Using microwear and use wear analysis the pair narrowed their research to 54 lithic flakes from among the oldowan which they used to understand the at least 1 4 million year old civilization Nine of these 54 exhibited signs of wear in their analysis which involved high power microscopy at 50 400x magnification 14 Keeley discovered that these nine flakes which would have been overlooked by most traditional studies were actually used as stone tools themselves and were not simply debitage from the creation of lithic cores 15 Their conclusion was that flakes themselves were the desired tool in lithic reduction which was supported by their identification of flakes used for butchery woodworking and standard cutting of plant matter 16 At the time of publishing this use theory ran counter to a competing theory that lithic cores were the primary intended tools 17 Since publishing however their theories have become widely known and have found support in several other studies Their joint study was published in Nature and has been widely cited as an example of hominid behavioral reconstruction 5 Toth later hypothesized that these flake tools were likely to have initially been created accidentally from the creation of cores but later became the desired result instead of cores He also stated that the development of flake tools was crucial in the evolution of human intelligence a theory that has found support even outside of archaeology 7 18 19 War Before Civilization edit nbsp According to War before Civilization modern western societies are significantly less violent than various historical groups Main article War Before Civilization Keeley s best known work is War Before Civilization The Myth of the Peaceful Savage published by the Oxford University Press in 1996 This book was an empirical rebuttal of the popular romantic anthropological idea of the noble savage 4 Keeley s core thesis is that western academics had pacified history especially relating to the role of violence in the history of human development and that overall death rates in modern societies were remarkably lower than among small scale Paleolithic groups War Before Civilization reinvigorated classic arguments regarding human nature largely inspired by Thomas Hobbes and Jean Jacques Rousseau s perspectives on the subject This book also initiated a renewed interdisciplinary interest in war in the context of sociocultural evolution which lasted through the latter 1990s 20 21 22 The findings of this book have been the subject of some criticism including a short 2014 article reprinted by Indian Country Today 23 Keith F Otterbein an anthropology professor criticized Keeley s book in American Anthropologist explaining that Keeley was right to identify two competing theories on human nature but that he did not capture the full scope of historical developments by disregarding the idea of peaceful prehistoric hominids Neil L Whitehead another notable anthropologist and someone identified by Keeley citation needed as a proponent of the myth of the peaceful savage sympathized with Otterbein but saw other ways to challenge Keeley s peculiar view of anthropology 24 25 Books editExperimental Determination of Stone Tool Uses A Microwear Analysis University of Chicago Press 1980 ISBN 978 0226428895 War Before Civilization The Myth of the Peaceful Savage Oxford University Press 1996 ISBN 978 0195091120References edit a b c Deaths Lawrence Keeley November 28 2017 Retrieved May 16 2022 Lawrence H Keeley PhD Retrieved May 16 2022 a b c Dunmore Christopher J Pateman Ben Key Alastair March 2018 A citation network analysis of lithic microwear research PDF Journal of Archaeological Science 91 33 42 Bibcode 2018JArSc 91 33D doi 10 1016 j jas 2018 01 006 a b Renfrew Colin Bahn Paul G 2016 Archaeology Theories Methods and Practice 7th ed Thames and Hudson pp 220 221 ISBN 9780500292105 a b c d e Yerkes Richard 24 July 2019 Lawrence H Keeley s contributions to the use of microwear analysis in reconstructions of past human behavior 1972 2017 Journal of Archaeological Science Reports 27 Department of Anthropology Ohio State University 101937 Bibcode 2019JArSR 27j1937Y doi 10 1016 j jasrep 2019 101937 S2CID 199933153 Retrieved May 16 2022 Odell George Hamley 1975 Micro Wear in Perspective A Sympathetic Response to Lawrence H Keeley World Archaeology 7 2 226 40 doi 10 1080 00438243 1975 9979635 JSTOR 124041 Retrieved May 16 2022 a b Toth Nicholas April 1987 The First Technology Scientific American 256 4 112 121 Bibcode 1987SciAm 256d 112T doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0487 112 ISSN 0036 8733 Shea John J 1992 Lithic microwear analysis in archeology Evolutionary Anthropology 1 4 143 150 doi 10 1002 evan 1360010407 S2CID 84924296 Keeley Lawrence H Newcomer Mark H 1977 Microwear analysis of experimental flint tools a test case Journal of Archaeological Science 4 1 29 62 Bibcode 1977JArSc 4 29K doi 10 1016 0305 4403 77 90111 X ISSN 0305 4403 Olle Andreu Borel Antony Verges Bosch Josep Maria Sala Robert 2014 Scanning Electron and Optical Light Microscopy two complementary approaches for the understanding and interpretation of usewear and residues on stone tools Journal of Archaeological Science 48 46 59 Bibcode 2014JArSc 48 46B doi 10 1016 j jas 2013 06 031 ISSN 0305 4403 Newcomer Mark Grace R Unger Hamilton R 1986 Investigating microwear polishes with blind tests Journal of Archaeological Science 13 3 203 217 Bibcode 1986JArSc 13 203N doi 10 1016 0305 4403 86 90059 2 ISSN 0305 4403 Moss Emily H 1987 A review of Investigating microwear polishes with blind tests Journal of Archaeological Science 14 5 473 481 Bibcode 1987JArSc 14 473M doi 10 1016 0305 4403 87 90033 1 ISSN 0305 4403 Bamforth Douglas B 1988 Investigating microwear polishes with blind tests The institute results in context Journal of Archaeological Science 15 1 11 23 Bibcode 1988JArSc 15 11B doi 10 1016 0305 4403 88 90015 5 ISSN 0305 4403 Herrygers Christa 2002 A Comparative Analysis of Wood Residues on Experimental Stone Tools and Early Stone Age Artifacts A Koobi Fora Case Study McNair Scholars Journal 6 1 Keeley Lawrence Toth Nicholas 1981 Microwear polishes on early stone tools from Koobi Fora Kenya Nature 293 5832 464 465 Bibcode 1981Natur 293 464K doi 10 1038 293464a0 S2CID 4233302 Retrieved May 17 2022 Toth Nicholas Schick Kathy Diane 1986 The First Million Years The Archaeology of Protohuman Culture Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory 9 29 JSTOR 20210075 Plummer Thomas 2004 Flaked stones and old bones Biological and cultural evolution at the dawn of technology American Journal of Physical Anthropology 125 Supplement 39 Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 118 164 doi 10 1002 ajpa 20157 ISSN 0002 9483 PMID 15605391 Toth Nicholas 1985 The Oldowan Reassessed A Close Look at Early Stone Artifacts Journal of Archaeological Science 12 2 101 120 Bibcode 1985JArSc 12 101T doi 10 1016 0305 4403 85 90056 1 ISSN 0305 4403 Cousins Steven D 2014 The semiotic coevolution of mind and culture Culture amp Psychology 20 2 160 191 doi 10 1177 1354067X14532331 S2CID 145519137 Lawler Andrew 2012 The Battle Over Violence Science 336 6083 829 830 doi 10 1126 science 336 6083 829 ISSN 1095 9203 JSTOR 41584838 PMID 22605751 Arrow Holly 2007 The Sharp End of Altruism Science 318 5850 581 582 doi 10 1126 science 1150316 ISSN 1095 9203 JSTOR 20051440 PMID 17962546 S2CID 146797279 Thorpe I J N 2003 Anthropology Archaeology and the Origin of Warfare World Archaeology 35 1 145 165 doi 10 1080 0043824032000079198 ISSN 1470 1375 JSTOR 3560217 S2CID 54030253 Jacobs Don Four Arrows 2014 The Heart of Everything That Isn t the Untold Story of Anti Indianism in Drury and Clavin s Book on Red Cloud Ict News Retrieved May 17 2022 Whitehead Neil L 2000 A History of Research on Warfare in Anthropology Reply to Keith Otterbein American Anthropologist 102 4 834 837 doi 10 1525 aa 2000 102 4 834 ISSN 1548 1433 JSTOR 684206 Otterbein Keith F 1999 A History of Research on Warfare in Anthropology American Anthropologist 101 4 794 805 doi 10 1525 aa 1999 101 4 794 ISSN 1548 1433 JSTOR 684054 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lawrence H Keeley amp oldid 1191242660, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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