Trends and traditions in southeastern zooarchaeology
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Trends and traditions in southeastern zooarchaeology
(Ripley P. Bullen series)
University Press of Florida, c2014
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Contents of Works
- Som times I git a nuff and som times I don't : confederate subsistence and the evidence from the Florence Stockade (38FL2), Florence, South Carolina / Judith A. Sichler
- Foodways, economic status, and the Antebellum Upland South cultural tradition in Central Kentucky / Tanya M. Peres
- Shell trade : craft production at a fourteenth-century Mississippian frontier / Maureen S. Meyers
- The dogs of Spirit Hill : an analysis of domestic dog burials from Jackson County, Alabama / Renee B. Walker and R. Jeannine Windham
- Hunting ritual, trapping meaning, gathering offerings / Cheryl Claassen
- Embedded : five thousand years of shell symbolism in the southeast / Aaron Deter-Wolf and Tanya M. Peres
- Behavioral, environmental, and applied aspects of molluscan assemblages from the Lower Tombigbee River, Alabama / Evan Peacock, Stuart W. McGregor, and Ashley A. Dumas
Description and Table of Contents
Description
These essays highlight the differences between the archaeological focus on animals as the food source of their time and the belief among zooarchaeologists that animals represent a far more complex ecology. With broad methodological and interpretive analysis of sites throughout the region, the essays range in topic from the enduring symbolism of shells over more than 5,000 years to the domesticated dog cemeteries of Spirit Hill in Jackson County, Alabama.
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