Bibliography

  1. Allaby, M, & Lovelock, J. (1983).The great extinction. London: Secker & Warburg. 
  2. Alland Jr., A. (1983). Playing with form: children draw in six cultures. New York: Columbia University Press. 
  3. Altuna, J. (1983). On the relationship between archeo-faunas and parietal art in the caves of the Cantabrian region. In J. Clutton-Brock & C. Grigson (Eds.), Animals and archaeology 1: Hunters and their prey. pp. 227-238. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports Int. Series 163. 
  4. Altuna, J. (1986). The mammalian faunas from the prehistoric site of La Riera. In L. Straus & G. Clark (Eds.), La Riera cave: Stone age hunter-gatherer adaptations in Northern Spain. pp. 737-374. Arizona State University, Anthropological Research Papers, No. 36. 
  5. Arnheim, R. (1954). Art and visual perception. Berkeley: University of California Press. 
  6. Baldwin, D. A. (1989). Priorities in children's expectations about object label reference: Form over colour. Child Development, 60, 1291-1306. 
  7. Baffier, D. (1984). Les caractères seuels secondaires des mammifères dans l'art pariétal paléolithiques franco-cnatabrique. In H. Bandi et al. (Eds.), La contribution de la zoologie et dl'éthologie à l'interpretation de l'art des peuples chasseurs préhistoriques. Fribourg: Editions Universitaires. 
  8. Bailey, G. (1983). Economic change in Late Pleistocene Cantabria. In G. Bailey (Ed.), Hunter-gatherer economy in prehistory. pp. 149-165. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  9. Bahn, P. G. (1977). Seasonal migration in Southwest France during the Late Glacial Period. Journal of Archaeological Science, 4, 245-257. 
  10. Bahn, P. G. (1983). Late Pleistocene economies of the French Pyrenees. In G. Bailey (Ed.), Hunter-gatherer economy in prehistory. pp. 168-187. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  11. Bahn, P. G. (1986). No sex, please, w'ere Aurignacians. Rock Art Research, 3, 99-120. 
  12. Bahn, P. G. & Vertut, J. (1988). Images of the ice-age. London: Windward. 
  13. Bahn, P. G. (1994). New advances in the field of Ice Age art. In Nitecki, M. H. & Nitecki, D. V. Origins of anatomically modern humans (124-132). New York: Plenum. 
  14. Baldwin, J. M. (1894/1906). Mental development in the child and in the race: Third edition. New York, NY: The Macmillan Company. 
  15. Bang, P. & Dahlstrom, P. (1974). Animal tracks and signs. London: Collins. 
  16. Berenguer, M. (1973). Prehistoric man and his art: The caves of Ribadesella. (Trans. M. Heron). London: Souvenir Press. 
  17. Biederman, I. (1987). Recognition-by-components: A theory of human image understanding. Psychological Review, 94,115-147. 
  18. Biederman, I. (1988). Aspects and extensions of a theory of human image understanding. In Z. Pylyshyn (Ed.) Computational processes in human and machine vision: An interdisciplinary perspective. Ablex. 
  19. Biederman, I. (1989). The uncertain case for cultural effects in pictorial object recognition. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 12, 74-75. 
  20. Biederman, I. & Ju, G. (1988). Surface versus edge-based determinants of visual recognition. Cognition, 20, 38-64. 
  21. Bickerton, D. (1990). Language and species. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  22. Binford, I. R. (1973). Interassemblage variablity -- the Mousterian and the 'functional' argument. In C. Renfrew (Ed.) The explanation of cultural change. Duckworth: London. 
  23. Binford, I. R. (1977). Theory building in archeology. Academic Press: New York. 
  24. Binford, I. R. (1981). Bones, ancient men and modern myths. Academic Press: New York. 
  25. Binford, I. R. (1983) In pursuit of the past. Thames and Hudson: London. 
  26. Binford, S. R. & Binford, I. R. (1966). A preliminary analysis of of functional variability in the Mouserian of Levallois facies. American Anthropologist, 68, 238- 295. 
  27. Bouvier, M. (1988). L'art solutréen et magdalénien. Histoire et Archeologie, 131, 30-35. 
  28. Bouchner, M. (1982). Animal tracks and traces. London: Octopus books. 
  29. Brain, C. K. (1981). The hunters or the hunted? An introduction to African cave taphonomy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 
  30. Breuil, H. (1952). Quatre cents siécles d'art pariétal. Montignac: Centre d'Etudes de la Documentation Préhistorique. 
  31. Breuil, H. (1979). Forty centuries of cave art. M. E. Boyle (Trans.), New York: Hacker. 
  32. Breuil, H. & Obermaier, H. (1935). The cave of Altimira at Santillan del Mar, Spain. Madrid: Tipographia de Achivos. 
  33. Bryson, N. (1983). Vision and painting: The logic of the gaze. New York: Macmillan. 
  34. Burenhult, G. (Ed.) (1993). The first humans: Human origisn and history to 10,000 BC. San Francisco: Harper. 
  35. Butterworth, G. (1995). An ecological perspective on the origins of the self. In J. Bermudez, N. Eilan, and A. Marcel (Eds.), The Body and the self. Cambridge, MA:MIT Press. 
  36. Cabe, P. A. (1980). Picture perception in non-human subjects. In M. A. Hagen (Ed.) The perception of pictures: Vol 2. New York: Academic Press. 
  37. Calvin, W. (1982). Did throwing stones shape hominid brain evolution. Ethology and Sociobiology, 3, 115-124. 
  38. Calvin, W. (1983). The throwing Madonna: Essays on the brain. New York: McGraw-Hill. 
  39. Calvin, W. (1986). The river that flows uphill: A journey from the big bang to the big brain. San Francisco; Sierra Club Books. 
  40. Calvin, W. (1987). The brain as a Darwin machine. Nature, 330, 33 34. 
  41. Calvin, W. (1989). The cerebral symphony: Seashore reflections on the structure of consciousness. New York: Bantam. 
  42. Calvin, W. (1993). The unitary hypothesis: A common neural circuitry for novel manipulations, language, plan-ahead, and throwing? In Gibson, K. R. & Ingold, T. (Eds.) Tools, language, and cognition in human evolution. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  43. Calvin, W. (1989). A global brain theory. Science. 240, 1802-1803. 
  44. Campbell, D. T. (1966). Evolutionary epistemology. In P. A. Schlepp (Ed.), The philosophy of Karl Popper. La Salle: Open Court. 
  45. Caron-Pargue, J. (1989). Is pictorial space "perceived" as real space? Behavioral and brain sciences, 12, 75-76. 
  46. Camps, G. (1984). La défication dans l'art paléolithique. In H. Bandi et al. (Eds.), La contribution de la zoologie et dl'éthologie à l'interpretation de l'art des peuples chasseurs préhistoriques. Fribourg: Editions Universitaires. 
  47. Capitaine, L., Breuil, H., & Peyrony, D. (1910). La caverne de Font de Gaume. Monaco: Imprimerie Vue A. Chene. 
  48. Chase, P. G. & Dibble, H. (1987). Middle Paleolithic symbolism: A review of current evidence and interpretation. Journal of Anthropology and Archaeology, 6, 263-296. 
  49. Cheney, D. L. & Seyfarth, R. M. (1990). How monkeys see the world. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 
  50. Clot, A. (1973). L'Art graphique préhistoire des hautes Pyrénées. Saragossa: Octavio Y Félez. 
  51. Clottes, J. (1984). Grotte de Niaux. In L'Art des cavernes: atlas des grottes ornées paléolithiques française. pp. 417-423. Paris: Imprimeries Nationale. 
  52. Clottes, J. (1994?). Paint analyses from several Magdeleian caves in the Ariège region of France. Journal of Archaeological Science, 
  53. Clottes, J., Menu, M., & Walter, P. (1990a). La préparation des peinturesMagdaléniennes des cavernes Ariègoise. Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Française. 87, 170-192. 
  54. Clottes, J., Menu, M., & Walter, P. (1990b). New light on Niaux paintings. Rock Art Research, 7, 21-26. 
  55. Colapietro, V. M. (1989). Peirce's approach to the self: a Semiotic perspective on human subjectivity. Albany, State University of New York Press. 
  56. Combier, J. (1991). L'art des hommes de Cro-Magnon dans la region Rhodanienne. Les Dossiers d'Archeologie, 161,12-25. 
  57. Conkey, M. W. (1978). Style and information in cultural evolution: Toward a preedictive model for the Paleolithic. In C. Redmond, W. Langhorne, M. Berman, N. Versaggi, E. Curtin, & J. Wanser (Eds.) Social anthropology: Beyond subsistance and dating. pp. 61-84. 
  58. Conkey, M. W. (1980). Context, structure and eficiency in Paleolithic art and design. In M. L. Foster & S. H. Brandes (Eds.) Symbol as sense: New approaches in the analysis of meaning. pp. 225-248, New York: Academic Press. 
  59. Conkey, M. W. (1983). On the origins of Paleolithic art: A review and some critical thoughts. In E. Trinkhaus (Ed.), The Mousterian legacy: Human biocultural change in the Upper Pleistocene. BAR International Series No. 164:210-227. 
  60. Conkey, M. W. (1984). To find ourselves: Art and social geography of prehistoric hunter gatherers. In C. Shrire (Ed.), Past and present hunter gatherer societies. pp. 253-276. New York: Academic Press. 
  61. Conkey, , M. (1987). New approaches in the search for meaning? A review of research in "Paleolithic art." Journal of Field Archaeology, 14, 413-430. 
  62. Conkey, M. W. (1989). The structural analysis of Paleolithic art. In C. C. Lamberg-Karolofsky (Ed.), Archaeological thought in America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  63. Conkey, M. W. (1991). Contexts of action, contexts of power: Material culture and gender in the Magdelenian. In J. Gero and M. Conkey, (Eds.), Engendering archaeology: Women in prehistory. Oxford: Blackwell. 
  64. Conkey, M. W. (1993). Humans as materialists and symbolists: Image making in the Upper Paleolithic. In D. T. Rasmussen (Ed.), The origin and evolution of humans and humanness. Boston: Jones and Bartlett. 
  65. Conkey, M. W. (1994?). Paleovisions: Interpreting the imagery of ice age Europe. New York: Freedman. 
  66. Couraud, C. (1985). L'Art Azilian. Origine -- Survivance. XXe Supplément à Gallia Préhistoire. CNRS: Paris.Dams, L. (1978). L'Art paléolithique de la caverne de la Pileta. Graz: Akademische Druck-U-Verlagsantalt. 
  67. Damasio, A. R. (1994). Descartes' error: Emotion, reason, and the human brain. New York: Putnam. 
  68. Danto. A. C. (1989). Variations in pictorial culture. Behavioral and brain sciences, 12, 77-78. 
  69. Davidson, I. & Noble, W. (1989). The archaeology of perception: Traces of depiction and language. Current Anthropology, 30, 125-156. 
  70. Davis, A. M. (1985). The canoniacal bias: Young children's drawings of familiar objedts. In N. H. Freeman & M. V. Cox (Eds.) Visual order: The nature and development of pictorial representation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  71. Davis, W. (1986). The origins of image making. Current Antropology, 27, 193-215. 
  72. Davis, W. (1987). Replication and depiction in Paleolithic art. Representations, 19, 111-147. 
  73. Day, R. H. (1989). Images, depth cues, and cross-cultural differences in perception. Behavioral and brain sciences, 12, 78-79. 
  74. deBaune, S. (1987). Paleolithic lamps and their specialization: A hypothesis. Current Anthropology, 28, 569-577. 
  75. Delluc, B. & Delluc, G. (1976). Les manifestations graphiques aurignaciens sur support des environs des Eyzies. Gallia Préhistoire, 21, 213-438. 
  76. Delluc, B. & Delluc, G. (1984). Grotte de Comarque. In L'art des cavernes: atlas des grottes ornées, pp. 119-122. 
  77. Delluc, B. & Delluc, G. (1985). De l'emprinte au signe. In Traces et messages de la préhistorique. Dossiers de l'Archaeologie, 90, 56-62. (Delluc, B. & Delluc, G. (1985). De l'empreinte au sign. Histoire et archéologie, 90, 63--76.) 
  78. Delluc, B. & Delluc, G. (1991). L'art pariétal archaïque en Aquitaine. 28e supplément à Gallia préhistoire. Paris: Centre National de la Recherche Scientific. 
  79. Delpeche, F. (1983). Les faunes du paléolithique supérieur dans le sud ouest de la France. Paris: Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifique. 
  80. Delporte, H. (1984). L'art mobilier et ses rapports avec la faune paléolithique. In H. Bandi et al. (Eds.), La contribution de la zoologie et dl'éthologie à l'interpretation de l'art des peuples chasseurs préhistoriques. Fribourg: Editions Universitai res. 
  81. Deregowski, J. B. (1984). Distortion in art: The eye and the mind. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. 
  82. Dergowski, J. B. (1989). Real space and represented space: Cross-cultural perspectives. Behavioral and brain sciences, 12, 51- 119. 
  83. Deregowski, J. B., Muldow, E.S., & Muldow, W. F. (1972). Pictorial recognition in a remote Ethiopian population. Perception, 1, 417-425. 
  84. d'Errico, F. (1989). Paleolithic lunar calendars: a case of wishful thinking. Current Anthropology. 30,117-118,491-500. 
  85. Dissanayake, E. (1979). An ethological view of ritual and art in human evolutionary history. Leonardo, 12, 27-31. 
  86. Dissanayake, E. (1974). A hypothesis of the evolution of art from play. Leonardo, 7,211. 
  87. Dixon, D. B. (1990). The dawn of belief: Religion in the Upper Paleolithic of Southwestern Europe. Tucson: The University of Arizona Press. 
  88. Donald, M. (1991). Origins of the modern mind: three stages in the evolution of culture and cognition. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 
  89. Donner, J. (1975). Pollen composition of the Abri Pataud sediments. In H. L. Movius (Ed.), Excavations of the Abri Pataud, Les Eyzies (Dordogne).Cambridge, Mass: 
  90. Falk, D. (1980). Hominid brain evolution: The approach from paleoneurology. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology, 23, 93-107. 
  91. Falk, D. (1987). Hominid paleoneurology. Annual Review of Anthropology, 16, 13-30. 
  92. Falk, D. (1990). Brain evolution in Homo: The "radiator" theory. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 13 333-381.
  93. Falk, D. (1991). Implications of the evolution of writing for the origin of language: Can a paleoneurologist find happiness in the Neolithic? In B. Chiarelli, P. Lieberman, and J. Wind (Eds.). The origins of human language. Netherlands: Kluwer. 
  94. Falk, D. (1992). Braindance. New York: Henry Holt and Company.
  95. Fine, D. & Craig, G. T. (1981). Buccal surface wear of human premolar and molar teeth: A potential indicator of dietary and social differentiation. Journal of Human Evolution, 10, 335-344. 
  96. Fisher, A. G. (1984). Two phonerozoic supercycles. In W. A. Berggren & J. A. Van Couvering (Eds.) Catastrophes and earth history. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 
  97. Falkus, (1978). Nature detective. London: Victor Gollancz. 
  98. Foley, R. (1987). Hominid species and stone tool assemblages: How are they related? Antiquity, 61, 380-392. 
  99. Fortes, M. (1940). Children's drawing among the Tallensi. Africa, 13, 293-295. 
  100. Fortes, M. (1981). Tallensi children's drawing. In B. Lloyd & J. Gay (Eds.) Universals of human thought. Cambridge: cambridge University Press. 
  101. Foucault, M. (1984). Les mot et les chose: Une archéology des science humanines. Gallimard: Paris. 
  102. Freeman, N. H. (1980). Strategies of representaion in young children: Analysis of spatial skills and drawing processes. London: Academic Press. 
  103. Freeman, N.H. (1989). A computational approach to picture production is needed right here. Behavioral and brain sciences, 12, 82-84. 
  104. Employs the interesting term "icon-detectors". 
  105. Freeman, N. H. & Cox, M. V. (Eds.) (1985). Visual order: The nature and development of pictorial representation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  106. Frost, G. T. (1980). Tool use and the origins of laterality. Journal of Human Evolution, 9, 447-457. 
  107. Gardner, H. (1980). Artful Scribbles: The significance of children's drawings. New York: Basic Books. 
  108. Gearhart, M. & Newman, D. (1980). Learning to draw a picture: The social context of individual activity. Discourse Processes, 3, 169-184. 
  109. Gamble, C. (1982). Interaction and alliance in Paleolithic society. Man (N.S.) 17, 92-107. 
  110. Garcia Guinea, M. A. (1989). Altimira and other Cantabrian caves. Midrid: Silex. 
  111. Gibson, J. J. (1950). The perception of the visual world. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. 
  112. Gibson, J. J. (1951). What is form? Psychological Review, 58, 403-412.Graziosi, P. (1960). Palaeolithic art. New York: McGraw Hill. 
  113. Gibson, J. J. (1979).The ecological approach to the visual perception of pictures. Leonardo, 11, 227-235. 
  114. Gibson, J. J. (1982). Reasons fo realism. Selected essays of J. J. Gibson. E Reed and R. Jones (Es.). Hillsdale:Lawrence Erlbaum. 
  115. Golomb, C. (1974). Young children's sculpture and drawing. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 
  116. Gombrich: E. H. (1977). Art and illusion: A study in the psychology of pictorial representation, (fifth edition). London: Phaidon. 
  117. Gombrich, (1979), E. H. On J. J. Gibson's approach to the visual perception of pictures. Leonardo, 12, 174-175. 
  118. Gombrich, E. H. & Kris, E. (1940). Caricature. Harmondsworth, UK: Penguin. 
  119. Goodman, N. (1968). Languages of art: An approach to a theory of symbols. New York: Bobbs-Merrill. 
  120. Goodman, N. (1978). The ways of worldmaking. Sussex: Harvester.Guthrie, R. D. Ethologial Observations from Paleolithic art. In H. Bandi et al. (Eds). Contibution de la zoologie et del'ethologie pour l'interpretation de lart des peuples chasseurs préhi storique. Editions Universitaires Fribourg, Suisse. 
  121. Goodman, N. (1979). Gibson's approach to the visual perception of pictures. Leonardo, 12, 175. 
  122. Goodnow, J. (1977) Children's drawings. Cambridge Mass.: Harvard University Press. 
  123. Goody, J. (1977). The domestication of the savage mind. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  124. Goody, J (1986). The logic of writing and the organization of society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  125. Goody, J. (1987). The interface between the oral and the written. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  126. Gordon, B. (1988). Of men and reindeer herds in French Magdelenian Prehistory. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, Int. Series 390. 
  127. Halverson, J. (1987). Art for art's sake in the Paleolithic. Current Anthropology, 28, 63-89. 
  128. Halverson, J. (1992). The first pictures: Perceptual foundations of Paleolithic art. Perception, 21, 389-404. 
  129. Hayden, B. (1993). The cultural capacities of Neandertals: A review and re-evaluation. Journal of Human Evolution, 24, 113-146. 
  130. Haynes, C. V. (1984). Stratigraphy and late pleistocene extinctions in the United States. In P. S. Martin & R. G. Klien (Eds.), Quaternary extinctions: A Prehistoric Revolution. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 
  131. Hewes, G. W. (1973a). An explicit formulation of the relationship between tool-using, tool-making, and the emergence of language. Visible Language, 7, 101-127. 
  132. Hewes, G. W. (1973b). Primate communication and the gestural origin of language. Current Anthropology, 14, 5-24. 
  133. Hewes, G. W. (1977). Language origin theories. In D. M. Rumbaugh, (Ed.), Language learning by a chimpanzee: The Lana project. New York: Academic Press. 
  134. Hill, H. E. & Evans, J. (1987). The identification of plants used in prehistory from organic residues. In W. R. Ambrose & J. M. J. Mummery (Eds.), Archeometry: Further Austalasian studies. Canberra: Australian National University. 
  135. Hillman, G. C. (1986). Plant foods in ancient diet: the archaeological role in paleofaeces in general and Lindow Man's gut contents in particular. In I. M. Stead (Ed.), Lindow man: the body in the bog. London British Museum Publications. 
  136. Hillman, G. C., Colledge, S. M., & Harris, D. R. (1990). Plant-food economy during the Epi-Paleolithic period at Tell Abu Hureyra, Syria: Dietary diversity, seasonality and modes of exploitation. In D. R. Harris & G. C. Hillman (Eds.), Foraging and farming: The evolution of plant exploitation. London: Unwin. 
  137. Hinton, G. E. & Nowland, S. J. (1987). How learning can guide evolution. Complex systems, I, Technical Report CMU-CS-86-128, Carnegie Mellon University, 495-502. 
  138. Hochberg, J. & Brooks, V. (1962). Pictorial recognition as an unlearned ability: A study of one child's performance. American Journal of Psychology, 75, 624-628. 
  139. Hooper, A. (1977). Note sur les oiseuax figures dans l'art plaléolithique. Bulletin de la Société Préhisotique de l'Ariège. 32, 85-87. 
  140. Hoopes, J. (Ed.) (1991). Peirce on signs: Writings on semiotic by Charles Sanders Peirce. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press. 
  141. Hummel, J. E. & Biederman, I. (1992). Dynamic binding in a neural network for shape recognition. Psychological Review, 99, 480-517. 
  142. Humphrey, G. K. & Jolicoeur, P. (1993). The Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 46A, 137-159. 
  143. Imbrie, J. & Imbrie, K. P. (1979). Ice ages: Solving the mystery. Short hills: Enslow. 
  144. Isaac, G. (1976). Stages of cultural elaboration in the Pliestocene: Possible archaeological indications of the development of language capabilities. In S. R. Harnad, H. D. Steklis, & J. Lancaster (Eds.) Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 28 0, 275-288. 
  145. Isaac, G. (1978). The food-sharing behavior of protohuman hominids. Scientific American, 284(4), 90-108. 
  146. Isaac, G. & McCown, E. (1979). Human origins. Menlo Park: Benjamin. 
  147. Isaac, G. (1983). Aspects of human evolution. In D. S, Bendall, (Ed.), Evolution from molecules to Men. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  148. Jaynes J. (1976,1990). The origins of consciousness in the breakdown of the bicameral mind (second edition). Boston: Houghton mifflin. 
  149. Jerison, H. (1973). Evolution of the brain and intelligence. New York: Academic Press.Leroi-Gourhan, A. (1968). The art of prehistoric man in Western Europe. London: Thames and Hudson. 
  150. Jochim, M. (1976). Hunteer-gatherer subsistence and settlement: A predictive model. New York: Academic Press. 
  151. Jochim, M. (1983). Paleolithic cave art in ecological perspective. In G. Bailey, (Ed.), Hunter-gatherer economy in prehistory. pp. 212-219. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  152. Kellogg, R. (1969). Analyzing children's art. Palo Alto: National Press Books. 
  153. Kennedy, J. M. (1974). Psychology of picture perception. Josssey-Bass. 
  154. Kennedy, J. M. (1976). Drawings were discovered, not invented. New Scientist, 67, 523-527. 
  155. Klein R. G. (1989). The human career: Human biological and cultural origins. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  156. Klein, R. G. (1995). Anatomy, behavior, and modern human origins. Journal of World Prehistory, 9, 167-198.
  157. Knecht, H., Pike-Tay, A. White, R. (1993). Before Lascaux: The complex record of the Early Upper Paleolithic. Boca Raton: CRC Press. 
  158. Kurtén, B. (1971). The age of mammals. London: Weidenfield and Nicolson. 
  159. Kurtén, B. & Anderson, E. (1980). Pleistocene mammals of North America. New York: Columbia University Press. 
  160. Laitman, J. T. (1986). L'origine du language articulé. La Recherche, 17, no. 181, 1164-1173. 
  161. Laming-Emperaire, A. (1962). La signification de l'art ruprestre franco-cantabrique. Paris. 
  162. Larkin, S. & Simon, H. A. (1987). Why a diagram is (sometimes) worth ten thousand words. Cognitive Science, 11, 65-100. 
  163. Lechtman, H. (1977). Style in technology: Some early thoughts. In H. Lechtman & R. Merill (Eds.), Material culture: Styles, organization, and dynamics of technology. pp. 3-20. St. Paul MN: American Ethnological Society. 
  164. Leeuwen, E. van, Dillman, R., & Broekman, J. (1992). Neurosemiotics - The loss of reference. In M. Balat & J. Deledalle-Rhodes (Eds.) Signs of humanity/L'homme et ses signes. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter. 
  165. LeGeoff, J. (1980). Time, work and culture. (A. Goldhammer, Trans.) Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 
  166. Leroi-Gourhan, A. (1964). Le geste et la parole: Technique et langage. Paris: Albin Michel. 
  167. Leroi-Gourhan, A. (1965). Le geste et la parole: La mémoire et les rythmes. Paris: Albin Michel. 
  168. Leroi-Gourhan, A. (1968). The art of the prehistoric man in western Europe. London: Thames & Hudson. 
  169. Leroi-Gourhan, A. (1982). The dawn of European art. Cambridge: Cambridge University College. 
  170. Leroi-Gourhan, A. (1990). Les religions de la préhistoire (third edition). Quadrige: Paris.Lorblanchet, M. (1974) L'art préhistorique en Quercy: La Grotte des Escabasses (Thémines, Lot). Saint Jammes:PGP. 
  171. Lieberman, P. & Crelin, E. S. (1971). On the speech of Neanderthal Man. Linguistic Inquiry, 11, 203-222. 
  172. Lieberman, P. (1974). Speech and Neanderthal Man. American Anthropologist, 76, 323-325. 
  173. Lieberman, P. (1973). On the evolution of human language: A unified view. Cognition, 2, 59-94. 
  174. Lieberman, P. (1975). On the origins of language: An introduction to the evolution of human speech. New York: Macmillan. 
  175. Lieberman, P. (1984). The biology of human language. Cambridge; Harvard University Press. 
  176. Lorblanchet, M. (1980) Peindre sur les parois de grottes. Dossiers de l'Archéologie, 46, 33-39. 
  177. Lorblanchet, M. (1990a). Etude des pigments de grottes ornées Paléolithiques du Quercy. Bulletindes Soc. et Litt. Sci. Art du Lot CXI, 2, 93-143. 
  178. Lorblanchet, M. (1990b). Paleolithic pigments in the Quercy, France. Rock Art Research, 7, 4-20. 
  179. Lorblanchet, M. (1991). Splitting images: Replicating the spotted horses at Peche Merle. Archaeology, 44, 24-31. 
  180. Luquet, G. H. (1927). Le dessin enfintin. Paris: Alcan.
  181. Lorblanchet, M. From naturalism to abstraction in European prehistoric rock art. In P. Ucko (Ed.), Form in indiginous art.pp. 44-56. London: Duckworth. 
  182. Mania, D. & Mania, U. (1988). Deliberate engravings on bone artifacts of Homo Erectus. Rock Art Research, 5, 91-107. 
  183. Marshack, A. (1972a) . The roots of civilization: The cognitive beginnings of man's first art, symbol, and notation. New York: McGraw-Hill. 
  184. Marshack, A. (1972b). Cognitive aspects of Upper Paleolithic engraving. Current Anthropology, 13, 445-477. 
  185. Marshack, A. (1974). Cognitive aspects of Upper Paleolithic engraving. Current Anthropology, 15, 327-332. 
  186. Marshack, A. (1975a). Cognitive aspects of Upper Paleolithic engraving. Current Anthropology, 16, 297-298. 
  187. Marshack, A. (1975b). Exploring the mind of Ice-Age man. National Geographic, 147(1), 64-89. 
  188. Marshack, A. (1976). Some implications of the paleolithic symbolic evidence for the origin of language. In S. R. Harnad, H. D. Steklis, & J. Lancaster (Eds.), Origins and evolution of language and speech. Ne York Academy of Science, 280, 289-311. 
  189. Marshack, A. (1984). The ecology and brain of two handed bipedalism: An analytic, cognitie, and evolutionary assessment. In H. L. Roitblatt, T. G. Bever, & H. S. Terrace (Eds.), Animal cognition. Hillsdale, NJ: Laurence Erlbaum. 
  190. Martin, P. S. (1967). Prehistoric overkill. In P. S. Martin & H. E. Wright Jr. (Eds.), Pleistocene extinctions: The search for a cause. New Haven: Yale University Press. 
  191. Martin, P. S. (1984). Prehistoric overkill: The global model. In P. S. Martin & R. G. Klien (Eds.), Quaternary extinctions: A prehistoric revolution. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 
  192. Marr, D. (1982). Vision: A computational investigation into the human representation and processing of visual information. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman. 
  193. Mellars, P. (1985). The ecological basis of social complexity in the Upper Paleolithic of Southwestern France. In T. D. Price & J. A. Brown (Eds.), Prehistoric hunter-gatherers: The emergence of cultural complexity. pp. 271-297. New York: Academic Press. 
  194. Mellars, P. (1989). Major issues in the emergence of modern humans. Current Anthropology, 30, 349-385.
  195. Mithen, S. J. (1988). Looking and learning: Upper Paleolithic art and information gathering. World Archaeology. 19, 297-327. 
  196. Mithen, S. J. (1990). Thoughtful foragers: A study in prehistoric decision making. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  197. Milton, K. (1981). Distribution patterns of tropical plant food as an evolutionary stimulus to primate mental development. American Anthropologist, 83, 534-548. 
  198. Milton, K. (1988). Foraging behavior and the evolution of primate intelligence. In R. A. Byrne & A. Whiten (Eds.), Machiavellian intelligence: Social expertise and the evolution of intellect in monkeys, apes and humans. Oxford: Oxford University Press . 
  199. Minsky, M. (1985). The society of mind. New York: Simon & Schuster. 
  200. Morell, V. (1995). The earliest art becomes older - and more common. Science, 267, 1908-1909. 
  201. Mulaik, S. A. (1995) The metaphoric origins of objectivity, subjectivity, and consciousness in the direct perception of reality, Philosophy of Science, 62, 283-303. 
  202. Murie, O. J. (1975). A field guide to animal tracks: second edition.Boston: Houghton Mifflin. 
  203. Musgrave, J. H. (1971). How dextrous was Neanderthal man? Nature, 233, 538-341. 
  204. Murie, O. (1954). A field guide to animal tracks.Camridge, Mass: The Riverside Press. 
  205. Nelson, R. K. (1973). Hunters of the northern forest: Designs for survival among the alaskan Kutchin. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 
  206. Noble, W. & Davidson, I. (1991) The evolutionary emergence of modern human behaviour: Language and its archaeology. Man, 26, 223-253. 
  207. Nougier, L. R. (1988). L'essor de la communication. Boulleret: Lieu Commun. 
  208. Ong, W. J. (1958). Ramus, method, and the decay of dialogue: From the art of discourse to the art of reason. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. 
  209. Ong, W. J. (1982). Orality and Literacy: The technologizing of the word. London: Methuen. 
  210. Pales, L. (1976). Les empreintes de pieds humains dans les cavernes. Archives de l'Institut du Paléontologie Humaine No 36, Masson: Paris. 
  211. Pales, L. & de St. Péreuse, M. T. (1966). Un cheval-prétexte: retour au chevetre. Objets et Mondes, 6, 187-206. 
  212. Pales, L. & de St. Péreuse, M. T. (1976). Les gravures de la Marche. II Les Huamines. Ophrys: Paris. 
  213. Paquerceau, M-M. (1976). La végétation au pleistocène supérieur et au début del'holocène dans le sud-ouest. In H. deLumley (Ed.), La préhistoire française. pp. 525-530. 
  214. Patou, M. (1984) La faune de la galerie rive droite du Mas d'Azil (Ariège), donné paléoclimatiques et paléthnographiques. Bulletin de la Société Préhistorique Française, 81, 311-319. 
  215. Peebles, C. S. (1989). The archaeology of space: Real and representational. Behavioral and brain sciences, 12, 91. 
  216. Peirce, C. S. (1982). Writings of Charles S. Peirce: A chronological edition. Vol. 2. (1867-1871) Bloominton, IN: Indiana University Press. 
  217. Peirce, C. S. (1868a). Questions concerning certain faculties claimed for man. Journal of Speculative Philosophy, 2, 103-114. 
  218. Peirce, C. S. (1868b). Some consequences of four incapacities. Journal of Specualtive Philosophy, 2, 140-157. 
  219. Perkins, D. N. & Hagen, M. A. (1980). Convention, context, and caricature. In M. A. Hagen (Ed.) The perception of pictures. New York: Academic Press. 
  220. Pfeiffer, j. (1982). The creative explosion: An inquiry into the origins of art and religion. New York: Harper and Row. 
  221. Pirenne, M. H. (1970). Optics, painting , and photography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  222. Puech, P. -F. (1979). The diet of early man: Evidence from abrasion of teeth and tools. Current Anthropology, 20, 590-592. 
  223. Rice, P. C. & Patterson, A. L. (1985). Cave art and bones: Exploring the interrelationships. American Anthropologist, 87, 94-100. 
  224. Raphael, M. (1945). Prehistoric Cave Paintings. New York: Pantheon. Sieveking, A. (1979). The cave artists. London: Thames and Hudson. 
  225. Rivers, K. T. (1991). Transmutations: Understanding literary and pictorial caricature. Lanham, ML: University Press of America. 
  226. Robins, G. (1986). Egyptian painting and relief. Shire: Aylesbury.Sieveking, A. (1980). Style and regional grouping in Magdelenian cave art. Institute of Archaeology Bulletin, 16-17, 95-109. 
  227. Rosch, E., Mervis, C. B., Gray, W., Johnson, D., & Boyes-Braem, P. (1976). Basic objects in matural categories. Cognitive Psychology, 3,382-439. 
  228. Saint Mathurin, S. C. de (1988). Les sculptures rupestres du Roc-aux-Sorciers. Histoire et Archeologie, 131, 42-49. 
  229. Sandars, N. K. (1985). Prehistoric art in Europe. Harrmondsworth, Middlesex: Penguin Books. 
  230. Saussure, F. de (1915). Cours de linguistique generale. Paris: Payot. English translation: (1966) Course in general linguistics. (Wade Baskin, Trans.) New York: McGraw-Hill. 
  231. Schick, K. D. & Toth, N. (1993). Making silent stones speak. Human evolution and the dawn of technology. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  232. Schubert, G. (1981). Glaciers, neoteny, and epigenesis: A review essay. Journal of Social and Biological Structures. 6, 65-80. 
  233. Shackley, M. (1980). Neanderthal Man. London: Duckworth.Spiess, A. E. (1979). Reindeer and caribou hunters: An archaeological study. New York: Academic Press. 
  234. Sheets-Johnstone, M. (1990). The roots of thinking. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. 
  235. Sheets-Johnstone, M. (1994). Précis of " The roots of thinking. " Psycoloquy, 94.5.08. 
  236. Sheriff, J. K. (1989). The fate of meaning: Charles Peirce, structuralism, and literature. Princeton: Princeton University Press. 
  237. Singer, B. (1987). Signs, interpretation, and the social world. In C. Hausman & T. M. Seebohm (Eds.), Pragmatism considers phenomenology. Washington: University Press of America. 
  238. Singer, , R. & Wymer, J. (1982). The Middle Stone Age at Klasies River mouth in South Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 
  239. Sieveking, A. (1976). Setlement patterns of the Late Magdalenian in the central Pyrenees. In G. de G. Sieveking, I. H. Longworth, & K. E. Wilson (Eds.), Problems in social and economic archaeology, pp. 583-603. London: Duckworth. 
  240. Sieveking, A. (1979). The cave artists. London: Thames and Hudson. 
  241. Sieveking, A. (1984). Paleolithic art and animal behaviour. In H. Bandi et al. (Eds.), La contribution de la zoologie et de l'ethologie à l'interpretation del'art des peuples chasseurs préhistoriques. pp. 91-109. 
  242. Singer, M. (1984). Man's glassy essence: Explorations in semiotic anthropology. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. 
  243. Smith, N. W. (1992). An analysis of Ice Age art: Its psychology and belief system. New York: Peter Lang. 
  244. Sommers, P. Van (1984). Drawing and cognition: Descriptive and experimental studies of graphic production processes. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 
  245. Straus, L. G. (1982). Observations on Upper Plaeolithic art: Old problems and new directions. Zephyrus, 34-35, 71-80. 
  246. Straus, L. G. & Clark, G. A. (1986). La Riera: Stone age hunter-gather adaptations in Cantabrian Spain. Arizona State University Anthropological Research Papers No. 36 Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 
  247. Stringer, C. B. & Gamble, C. (1993). In search of the Neanderthals. London: Thames and Hudson.
  248. Topper, D. R. (1979). Further reflections on J. J. Gibson's hypothesis of picture perception. Leonardo, 12, 135-136. 
  249. Toth, N. (1985). (1985). Archaeological evidence for preferential right-handedness in the Lower and Middle Pleistocene and its possible implications. Journal of Human Evolution, 14, 607-614. 
  250. Tversky, A. (1977). Features of Similarity. Psychological Review, 84, 327-352. 
  251. Ucko, P. & Rosenfeld, A. (1967). Paleolithic cave art. London: World University Library. 
  252. Valentin, B. (1989). Nature et fonctions des foyers de l'habitation Préhistoriques. Actes de colloque de Nemours 1987. Memoires du Musée de Préhistoire de l'lle de France, 2, 209-219. 
  253. van Sommers, P. (1984). Drawing and cognition: Descriptive and experimental studies of graphic production processes. Cambridge" Cambridge University Press. 
  254. Vialou, D. (1984). Des blocs scupté et gravé. Histoire et Archéologie, 87, 70-72. 
  255. Villa, P. (1986). Cannabalism in the Neolithic. Science, 233, 431-437. Vouvé, J., Brunet, J., Vidal, P., Marsal, J. (1982). Lascaux et Périgord Noir:environment, art pariétal,et conservation. Périgeux: Pierre Fanlac. 
  256. Vygotsky, L. S. (1934/62). Thought and language. (Ed. and Trans. E. Hanfmann & G. Vakar). Cambridge: MIT Press. 
  257. Walker, A. (1984).Extinction in hominid evolution. In M. Nitecki, (Ed.), Extinctions. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 
  258. Walton, K. (1973). Pictures and make-believe. Philosophical Review, 82, 283-319. 
  259. Wasserman, G. S. (1985). Neural/mental chronometry and chronotheology. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 8, 556-557. 
  260. Webb, S. D. (1984). Ten million years of mammal extinction in North America. In P. S. Martin & R. G. Klein (Eds.), Quaternary extinctions: A prehistoric revolution. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 
  261. Wendorf, F., Schild, R., & Close, A. (1980). Loaves and fishes: The prehistory of Wadi Kubbaniya. Dallas: Southern Methodist University Press. 
  262. White, R. (1982). The manipulation and use of burins in incision and notation. Canadian Journal of Anthropology, 2, 
  263. White, R. (1985). Upper Paleolithic land use in the perigord: A topographic approach to subsistence and settlement. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports, S 253. 
  264. White, R. (1985). Thoughts on social relationships and language in hominid evolution. Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 2, 95-115. 
  265. White, R. (1989). Visual thinking in the Ice Age. Scientific American, 261, 92-99. 
  266. Wilkins, W. K. & Wakefield, J. (1995). Brain evolution and neurolinguistic preconditions. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 18, 161-226.
  267. Willats, J. (1987). Marr and pictures: An information processing account of children's drawings. Archives de Psychologie, 55, 105-125. 
  268. Wright, A, & Vlietstra, A. (1975). The development of selective attention: From perceptual explanation to logical search. In L. B. Cohen & P. Salapatek (Eds.), Infant perception: From sensation to cognition. New York: Academic Press. 
  269. Zihlman, A. (1983). A behavioral reconstruction of australopithecus. In K. J. Reichs, (Ed.) Hominid origins. Washington, DC: University Press of America. 
  270. Psychology, Evolution, and Culture.