Glynn Isaac is best remembered for a series of papers and ideas which attempted to combine the available archeological record with models of both human behavior and a human activity from the standpoint of
evolution. In the early 1970s Isaac published on the effect of social networks, gathering, meat eating and other factors on human evolution, and proposed a series of models to examine how groups of humans in the
Paleolithic would have engaged in acquiring the necessities of life, and interacting with each other. Isaac's models focused on a "home base" and the importance of sexual division of labor on hominid social organization.
Works •
The Archaeology of Human Origins, Cambridge University Press. •
Olorgesailie: Archaeological Studies of the Middle Lake Basin in Kenya, University of Chicago Press, 1977. • The food-sharing behavior of protohuman hominids.
Scientific American 238:90-108, 1978. •
Koobi Fora Research Project: Plio-Pleistocene Archaeology, Glynn Ll. Isaac (Editor),
et al., Clarendon Press, 1997. •
Human Origins: Louis Leakey and the East African Evidence, Glynn Ll. Isaac, Elizabeth Richards McCown, WA Benjamin, 1976. ==See also==