
CARTA: Bird Nests: Adaptive Variation on Innate Bauplans with Susan Healy
CARTA: How Humans Came to Construct Their Worlds
CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny (Audio) · UCTV: UC San Diego
October 29, 202418m 21s
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Show Notes
As distinct from the buildings of termites (interesting though these are), bird nests offer a more apropos point of comparison for human buildings – they are conducted by single vertebrate (or a few) and can be adapted to varied circumstances, with even a small effect of social learning. However, the basic Bauplan remains species-specific, unlike the creativity of the human architect. Since nonhuman primates lack interesting building skills, and so we suggest that bird nest construction may come to play a similar comparative role for architectural design. The static Bauplan of birds can be compared to the near-stasis of human tool use until the end of the Paleolithic, challenging us to assess the changes in human practice that unlocked an increasingly rapid process of cultural evolution. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Humanities] [Science] [Show ID: 40159]
Topics
CARTAconstructionbuildingsbuilding constructionhomeshome constructionconstruction toolsstructuresarchitecturelandscapebird nestsstone toolscitiestownsBauplanNeanderthalsHomo sapiensAnthropology and ArchaeologyAnthr