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Brian E. Hemphill - Prehistoric lifeways in the Great Basin wetlands: bioarchaeological reconstruction and interpretation

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Edited by Brian E. Hemphill and Clark Spencer Larsen Anthropology and Archaeology Prehistoric Lifeways of the Great Basin Wetlands examines how the earliest inhabitants of the Great basin in Nevada, Utah, and Oregon made use of ancient marshes and lakes. When the Great Salt Lake receded in the 1980s from its highest historically recorded levels, it exposed a large number of archaeological and burial sites. Other wetland areas in the region experienced similar flooding and site exposure. The resulting archaeological bonanza resolved long-standing controversy over the role of wetlands in prehistoric Great Basin human subsistence. Previously, archaeologists argued two disparate views: either wetlands offered a wealth of resources and served as a magnet for human occupation and rather sedentary lifestyles, or wetlands provided only meager fare that was insufficient to promote increased sedentism. The exposure of human remains coincided with improved analytic techniques, enabling new conclusions about diet, behavior, and genetic affiliation. This volume presents findings from three Great Basin wetland areas: Great Salt Lake, Stillwater Marsh (Nevada) and Malheur Lake (Oregon). The evidence presented here does not indicate the superiority of one interpretation over another but offers a more complex picture of variable adaptation, high mobility, and generally robust health among peoples living in a harsh setting with heavy physical demands. It is the first volume to draw together new approaches to the study of earlier human societies, including analysis of mtDNA for population reconstruction and cross-sectional geometric assessment of long bones for behavior interpretation.

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title Prehistoric Lifeways in the Great Basin Wetlands Bioarchaeological - photo 1

title:Prehistoric Lifeways in the Great Basin Wetlands : Bioarchaeological Reconstruction and Interpretation
author:Hemphill, Brian E.
publisher:University of Utah Press
isbn10 | asin:0874806038
print isbn13:9780874806038
ebook isbn13:9780585270142
language:English
subjectIndians of North America--Great Basin--Antiquities, Indians of North America--Anthropometry--Great Basin, Human remains (Archaeology)--Great Basin, Great Basin--Antiquities.
publication date:1999
lcc:E78.G67P74 1999eb
ddc:979/.01
subject:Indians of North America--Great Basin--Antiquities, Indians of North America--Anthropometry--Great Basin, Human remains (Archaeology)--Great Basin, Great Basin--Antiquities.
Page iii
Prehistoric Lifeways in the Great Basin Wetlands
Bioarchaeological Reconstruction and Interpretation
Edited by
Brian E. Hemphill
Clark Spencer Larsen
Foreword by
David Hurst Thomas
Page iv 1999 by the University of Utah Press All rights reserved - photo 2
Page iv
1999 by the University of Utah Press
All rights reserved
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Prehistoric lifeways in the Great Basin wetlands : bioarchaeological
reconstruction and interpretation / edited by Brian E. Hemphill,
Clark Spencer Larsen : foreword by David Hurst Thomas.
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 0-87480-603-8 (alk. paper)
1. Indians of North AmericaGreat BasinAntiquities. 2. Indians
of North AmericaAnthropometryGreat Basin. 3. Human remains
(Archaeology)Great Basin. 4. Great BasinAntiquities.
I. Hemphill, Brian E. II. Larsen, Clark Spencer.
E78.G67P74 1999
979'.01dc21 99-43317
Page v
In memory of
Carol J. Loveland and Christopher Raven
Esteemed colleagues, friends, and scholars
of the American Great Basin
Page vi
Contents
List of Figures
viii
List of Tables
xi
Foreword
David Hurst Thomas
xv
1. Bioarchaeological Perspectives on Precontact Lifeways in the Great Basin Wetlands
Brian E. Hemphill and Clark Spencer Larsen
1
2. No One Owns the Deceased! The Treatment of Human Remains from Three Great Basin Cases
Steven R. Simms and Anan W. Raymond
8
3. Farmers, Foragers, and Adaptive Diversity: The Great Salt Lake Wetlands Project
Steven R. Simms
21
4. Stable Carbon Isotopes and Great Salt Lake Wetlands Diet: Toward an Understanding of the Great Basin Formative
Joan Brenner Coltrain and Thomas W. Stafford Jr.
55
5. Molecular Genetic Variation in Prehistoric Inhabitants of the Eastern Great Basin
Dennis H. O'Rourke, Ryan L. Parr, and Shawn W. Carlyle
84
6. A Biological Perspective on Prehistoric Human Adaptation in the Great Salt Lake Wetlands
Jason R. Bright and Carol J. Loveland
103
7. Theoretical and Archaeological Insights into Foraging Strategies among the Prehistoric Inhabitants of the Stillwater Marsh Wetlands
Robert L. Kelly
117

Page vii
8. Prehistoric Subsistence Strategies in the Stillwater Marsh Region of the Carson Desert
Margaret J. Schoeninger
151
9. Molecular Genetics and the Numic Expansion: A Molecular Investigation of the Prehistoric Inhabitants of Stillwater Marsh
Frederika A. Kaestle, Joseph G. Lorenz, and David Glenn Smith
167
10. Osteopathology of Carson Desert Foragers: Reconstructing Prehistoric Lifeways in the Western Great Basin
Clark Spencer Larsen and Dale L. Hutchinson
184
11. An Examination of Wetland Adaptive Strategies in Harney Basin: Comparing Ethnographic Paradigms and the Archaeological Record
Albert C. Oetting
203
12. Environmental Fluctuation and Physiological Stress in the Northern Great Basin
Greg C. Nelson
219
13. Wear and Tear: Osteoarthritis as an Indicator of Mobility among Great Basin Hunter-Gatherers
Brian E. Hemphill
241
14. Skeletal Structure and Behavioral Patterns of Prehistoric Great Basin Populations
Christopher B. Ruff
290
15. Faces in Prehistory: Great Basin Wetlands Skeletal Populations
Robert L. Bettinger
321
References
333
Contributors
383
Index
385

Page viii
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