Affluent Foragers of the North American Plains
Landscape Archaeology of the Black Hills
Written by Marcel Kornfeld
£28.00 – £35.00
Description
This study takes a landscape archaeological look at the foragers of North America’s Black Hills. After situating the study in a theoretical context, the author considers the specific human subsistence resources in the western Black Hills and how these structure the effective environment, presenting a model of specific procurement systems for related sets of resources and suggesting the characteristics of technological organization necessary for the operation of such systems. In the subsequent analysis of the western Black Hills archaeological record, regional distributions are emphasized, while technological organization is inferred from the spatial structure of the archaeological assemblage. Finally, the author discusses the effects of western Black Hills ecosystems on the dynamics of prehistoric human foragers. Regional land use, social and subsistence strategies provide an alternative scenario of Northwest Plains cultural behaviour.
You might also like...
-

Upper Paleolithic Land Use in the Périgord
Randall WhitePrint Book £62.00
PDF eBook £48.00 -

Upper Palaeolithic Osseous Artifacts from Britain and Belgium
Patricia McCombPrint Book £77.00
PDF eBook £59.00 -

The Taxonomy of Ground Stone Woodworking Tools
Quentin MackiePrint Book £32.00
PDF eBook £25.00 -

Two Industries in Roman Lusitania
J. C. EdmondsonPrint Book £77.00
PDF eBook £59.00 -

The Use of Living Space in Prehistory
Olena V. SmyntynaPrint Book £41.00
PDF eBook £32.00

