Human adaptation at Grasshopper Pueblo, Arizona : social and ecological perspectives

Bibliographic Information

Human adaptation at Grasshopper Pueblo, Arizona : social and ecological perspectives

by Joseph A. Ezzo

(Archaeological series, 4)

International Monographs in Prehistory, c1993

  • : hc

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Note

Based on a revision of the author's doctoral thesis

Includes bibliographical references (p. 87-103)

Description and Table of Contents

Description

A detailed study of the bone chemistry of individuals buried at the 14th century Grasshopper Pueblo site is presented in this volume. A wide range of elements were measured from these skeletons as indicators of diet, stress, and nutrition; these elements were related to parameters of age, sex, social differences, space, time, environmental change, and possible resource depletion. The major relationships were found to be with sex, space, and time, with significant changes in male and female diets over time, but also with patterned spatial differences in burials, suggesting household differences in access to food. This is a data-rich study which provides much information for social and economic reconstructions of prehistoric Pueblo adaptation to their environment.

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