Stone tools and mobility in the Illinois Valley : from hunter-gatherer camps to agricultural villages
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Stone tools and mobility in the Illinois Valley : from hunter-gatherer camps to agricultural villages
(Archaeological series, 10)
International Monographs in Prehistory, c1996
- : hc
- : pbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 399-418)
Description and Table of Contents
Description
A detailed comparative analysis of standardized lithic data from 10 Illinois Valley components spanning 7500 years from the Early Archaic through the Mississippian is presented in this volume perhaps the first time that such a comprehensive set of lithic variables has been analyzed for the entire Holocene of a region. A major part of this study constitutes the most extensive application of low-power lithic use-wear analysis to be found in the literature, accompanied by full discussion of the technique and a suite of new experimental data. The results provide significant information on prehistoric mobility and technological organization in mid-continental North America, revealing clearly for the first time a number of significant behavioral trends.
Table of Contents
- Contents: 1. The Lower Illinois Valley
- 2. Questions and Models
- 3. Methods of Analysis: Procurement, Manufacture, and Form
- 4. Methods of Analysis: Function
- 5. Campbell Hollow: The Early-Middle Archaic Transition
- 6. Napoleon Hollow: Middle-Late Archaic Contrasts
- 7. Elizabeth: Blufftop Mounds and a Middle Archaic Camp
- 8. Napoleon Hollow: Two Middle Woodland Mortuary Loci
- 9. Smiling Dan: A Middle Woodland Base Camp
- 10. Hill Creek: A Mississippian Farmstead with Structures
- 11. Generic Assemblage Comparisons
- 12. Systemic Questions
- 13. Conclusions
- Appendix
by "Nielsen BookData"