Let's start with something Small: An evaluation of social learning and scaling practices in Great Lakes potting communities during the Late Woodland

2021 ◽  
Vol 62 ◽  
pp. 101287
Author(s):  
Steven G.H. Dorland
1989 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 605-609 ◽  
Author(s):  
Charles E. Cleland

Martin's suggestion that there is great continuity in subsistence strategy through the Middle and Late Woodland periods of the Northern Great Lakes is rejected. She fails to produce convincing evidence for the use of gill nets during Middle Woodland times and to account for the difference in fish fauna on sites of these two periods. Also addressed here is the possible consequence of economic specialization on population size and fluctuation. It is concluded that unlike Middle Woodland populations, those of the Late Woodland fluctuate rather dramatically. Finally, it is suggested that whatever the cause of the population loss and mechanisms of replacement, these shifts likely have important implications for periodicity in ceramic style change.


2006 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 119-148 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeffrey A. Bursey

Agency theory, as it will be referred to here, is one of a number of explanatory paradigms that have been appearing with increasing frequency in the archaeological literature and numerous characterizations, applications, and explorations of its implications have been offered. In this article, an attempt will be made to explore the nature of this bundle of ideas and its potential for explaining some phenomena of the Late Woodland of the lower Great Lakes. Specifically, the evolution of Iroquoian social and political organization will be discussed, focusing on the maintenance of egalitarianism in the face of challenges proposed by archaeologists. The purpose of this discussion is to highlight some of the benefits of employing multiple perspectives or paradigms for interpreting the archaeological record.


2001 ◽  
Vol 66 (4) ◽  
pp. 615-632 ◽  
Author(s):  
William A. Lovis ◽  
Kathryn C. Egan-Bruhy ◽  
Beverley A. Smith ◽  
G. William Monaghan

The Schultz site (20SA2) is a benchmark site for understanding the Woodland adaptations of the Upper Great Lakes, although its older excavation data is not comparable with recent Eastern Woodlands research, which consistently uses fine-grained recovery techniques. The 1991 Schultz-site research collected supplementary and upgraded subsistence and environmental data to address questions about regional transformations from hunting and gathering to horticulture. In addition, questions regarding the role of aquatic and wetland resources, and how environmental change affected the availability and productivity of these alternative resources, were addressed. Results of faunal, floral, and geoarchaeological research reveal that Woodland economies in the Saginaw region of the Upper Great Lakes were keyed to environmental changes affecting wetland availability and productivity. The Early Woodland presence of cucurbits does not appear economically important until later when it is combined with more reliable supplementary food sources. Although chenopod is present during the Middle Woodland and early Late Woodland, wetland plant and animal resources act as surrogates for other starchy and oily seeded annuals common in other portions of the Midwest and in the Mid-South. Maize apparently does not achieve economic significance until the Late Woodland period. A model of this combined northern and southern strategy is developed.


1989 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 594-604 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susan Rapalje Martin

Aboriginal northern Great Lakes fishing strategies varied with season, target species, and organization of the labor force. The placement of Woodland archaeological sites complied with the structure of these fisheries, but their locations do not reflect prey specificity or one specialized technology. Rather, resource-general locations suggest an essential step in the process of specialization. Flexibility in settlement and social styles existed among prehistoric foragers of the midlatitudes, as did a variety of solutions to food-getting problems. Slow, accretional processes rather than temporally discrete growth processes were responsible for Late Woodland site characteristics in this region. Stable locational-selection patterns are visible through reexamination of the historical data base and through statistical analyses of environmental factors associated with sites at a number of Woodland localities.


1997 ◽  
Vol 62 (1) ◽  
pp. 112-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gary W. Crawford ◽  
David G. Smith ◽  
Vandy E. Bowyer

Five accelerator mass spectrometer (AMS) dates on corn (maize or Zea mays) from the Grand Banks site, Ontario, range from cal A.D. 540 to 1030. These are the earliest directly dated corn samples in the Lower Great Lakes region. The presence of corn during the Princess Point Complex, a transitional Late Woodland phase preceding the Ontario Iroquoian Tradition, is confirmed as is an early presence of the Princess Point culture in Ontario. Maize appears to have spread rapidly from the Southeast and/or Midwest to Ontario. The corn cupules and kernel remains are fragmentary, as they are elsewhere in the Eastern Woodlands during this period. The limited morphological data indicate that the corn is a diminutive form of Eastern Eight-Row, or Eastern Complex, maize.


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