Long Distance Logistic Mobility as an Organising Principle Among Northern Hunter-Gatherers: A Great Lakes Middle Holocene Settlement System
No === Concepts of residential and logistic mobility are applied to survey assemblages from multiple decades of research along the interior drainages of central lower Michigan. Drawing on the ethnographic record of boreal hunter-gatherers and archaeological interpretations of long-distance logistic...
Main Authors: | Donahue, Randolph E., Holman, M.B., Lovis, W.A. |
---|---|
Language: | en |
Published: |
2009
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3201 |
Similar Items
-
Teaching in hunter–gatherer infancy
by: Barry S. Hewlett, et al.
Published: (2016-01-01) -
The hunter-gatherer site BES II (Jacaré-Guaçu River low terraces, central Sao Paulo state, Brazil): Interface with geomorphical and environmental fluctuations of the Pleistocene-Holocene transition
by: Fabio Grossi Santos, et al.
Published: (2019-03-01) -
Is There Such a Thing as Hunter-Gatherer Archaeology?
by: Graeme Warren
Published: (2021-05-01) -
Early Holocene morphological variation in hunter-gatherer hands and feet
by: Kara C. Hoover, et al.
Published: (2018-09-01) -
Regional Settlement Systems in Mesolithic Northern England: Scalar Issues in Mobility and Territoriality.
by: Donahue, Randolph E., et al.
Published: (2009)