hunter-gatherers in English

noun
1
a member of a nomadic people who live chiefly by hunting, fishing, and harvesting wild food.
His primarily interest is in the Penan people, who live as hunter-gatherers in the forests.

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1. Comanches were nomadic hunter-gatherers

2. Even the hunter-gatherers used some elementary tools.

3. The Anasazi were nomadic hunter-gatherers spread over a large area

4. The hills' rock art has been linked to the local hunter gatherers.

5. Bandelier's human history extends back for over 11,000 years when nomadic hunter-gatherers followed migrating wildlife across the land

6. We will be talking about the San People of Botswana, who are often called the hunter gatherers or Bushmen

7. Broomcorn was a seed grain used by hunter-gatherers in China at least as long ago as 10,000 years

8. Summary and Definition: The Abenaki were farmers hunter gatherers and fishers whose lands stretched from Lake Champlain, the St

9. The term Bushman as it is used to describe certain southern African hunter-gatherers is somewhat controversial because it is …

10. These immediate-return hunter-gatherers never suffer anxiety about the future of food supplies and are characterized by improvident, generous, happy-go-lucky personalities.

11. The Blackfeet people were nomadic hunter/gatherers of the Great Plains who relied heavily on the buffalo as their main source of food as meat constituted

12. The Chumash Indians, hunter-gatherers centered on the south-central coast of Santa Barbara, were using highly worked shells as currency as early as …

13. The first 'permanent cultures' evolved when hunter-gatherers and nomadic people began tilling the earth and developing systems of agriculture, and Beans were among the first cultivated crops.

14. As hunter-gatherers, our forbears needed sensory cues to phenolic content -- Astringency and its taste analog, bitterness -- to distinguish food from poison, to determine ripeness and so forth.

15. It was here that the San hunter-gatherers of the Stone Age roamed the hills of the Limpopo and left behind their engravings and paintings in rock shelters.

16. Well, you look at modern hunter gatherers like aboriginals, who quarried for stone axes at a place called Mount Isa, which was a quarry owned by the Kalkadoon tribe.

17. But the archaeologist Lawrence Keeley, looking at casualty rates among contemporary hunter-gatherers, which is our best source of evidence about this way of life, has shown a rather different conclusion.

18. (14, 15, 16) Though no Ancestral population following a completely vegetarian or vegan diet has ever been discovered, it’s evident that hunter–gatherers did also enjoy plant foods, such as starchy root vegetables

19. Typical of the Plains Indians in many aspects of their culture, the Blackfoot, also known as Blackfeet, were nomadic hunter-gatherers, living in teepees and subsisting primarily on buffalo and gathered vegetable foods

20. The discovery of eight Biface lithic artefacts at Kashiwabara in Japan demonstrates the use of lithic reduction strategies, and suggests that mobile hunter-gatherers on the Japanese Islands were caching artefacts during the Incipient period of Jomon (c

21. These nomadic hunter-gatherers were followed by waves of Arawaks (a collective term for the Amerindian people believed to be from the Orinoco River Delta around Venezuela and Guyana) who moved north and west, beginning the great tradition

22. The Bushmen are hunter-gatherers, 75% of their diet consists of vegetable, including berries, walnuts, roots and melons, that are mainly harvested by women; while the remaining 25% is made up of meat that is hunted by men who hunt, using poisoned arrows and spears.

23. The settlement of the Americas is widely accepted to have begun when Paleolithic hunter-gatherers entered North America from the North Asian Mammoth steppe via the Beringia land bridge, which had formed between northeastern Siberia and western Alaska due to the lowering of sea level during the Last Glacial Maximum

24. This ritualized decapitation Attests to the early sophistication of mortuary rituals among hunter-gatherers in the Americas, geographically, it expands the known range of decapitation in more than 2,000 kilometers (about 1,240 miles), showing that during the early Holocene, this was not a phenomenon restricted to the western part of the continent as previously assumed.