Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W282615033> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 91 of
91
with 100 items per page.
- W282615033 startingPage "25" @default.
- W282615033 abstract "Vertebrate remains recovered from a large fire and refuse pit at the Hartford site (9PU1), Pulaski County, Georgia, provide a rare opportunity to consider animal use in the Georgia Pine Barrens. This Middle Woodland feature is located on the upper Atlantic Coastal Plain at a site that once had a village and at least one mound. The feature was inside a large oval structure beneath the mound. The collection contains 24,143 vertebrate specimens representing the remains of a minimum of 131 individuals from 43 taxa. This large, rich, moderately diverse sample yields evidence of aquatic and terrestrial resource use, multiple seasons of deposition, human interaction with the Piedmont and coast, and selective use of deer carcasses. Although comparative data are rare, data are available from two other upper Coastal Plain sites: G. S. Lewis and Kolomoki. Data from these three sites indicate vertebrate remains are an important source of evidence of human behavior and can be abundant at sites in the Pine Barrens. In 1970, Lewis Larson (1980) divided the Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plains into the Coastal sector, the South Florida sector, and the Pine Barrens sector. The Pine Barrens sector is bounded by the Fall Line Hills of the Atlantic and Gulf slopes and the tidal limits of rivers draining into the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico (Larson 1980:36). Larson hypothesized that during the Mississippian period, the Pine Barrens were unoccupied by permanent populations and were largely unsettled (Larson 1980:56, 58-59, 65). He argued for limited Mississippian use of the Pine Barrens because the sector had little subsistence value; the land was unsuited to maize cultivation, and few other resources were accessible with available technology (Larson 1980:56). Larson (1980:52-56) maintained that floodplains, bays, and swamps within the Pine Barrens were more productive than upland habitat, but even these areas offered limited resources. He also argued the Pine Barrens restricted cultural contact between coastal communities and those in the interior portions of North America (Larson 1980:65, 228). Although archaeologists are aware the Georgia Pine Barrens were occupied throughout the prehispanic period (e.g., Snow 1975, 1977; Stephenson et al. 1996; Williams 1994), Larson's hypotheses pertaining to animal use in the Pine Barrens are largely unexplored because little archaeological faunal evidence is available to inform the discussion. The Georgia Pine Barrens were clearly not isolated and uninhabited in the past (e.g., Snow 1975, 1977; Stephenson et al. 1996; Williams 1994). Site surveys provide evidence of human occupation of the Pine Barrens from the Paleoindian through Mississippian periods (Williams 1994). However, sites are not as abundant on the upper Coastal Plain as in other regions of Georgia (Williams 1994). Middle and Late Woodland period sites are more common in the Pine Barrens than sites occupied during other periods (e.g., Snow 1975; Williams 1994). Sites on the upper Coastal Plain primarily are found by archaeological surveys along rivers. Typically, these surveys provide little or no quantified information about animal use, thereby hindering efforts to address issues related to human subsistence behavior. Archaeologists conducting salvage work at the Hartford site (9PU1) recovered a large vertebrate collection, thus providing a rare opportunity to study vertebrate use in the Pine Barrens (Figure 1). Hartford is a Middle Woodland, Swift Creek site located on the Ocmulgee River. The site was well situated for people to use aquatic, floodplain, and upland resources. Hartford's location also may have enabled the residents to serve as intermediaries for exchange between the Piedmont and coast (e.g., Snow 1998; Snow and Stephenson 1998). The Hartford vertebrate faunal collection permits us to address several questions developed from Larson's hypotheses concerning animal use in the Pine Barrens sector: 1. …" @default.
- W282615033 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W282615033 creator A5050833196 @default.
- W282615033 creator A5080278699 @default.
- W282615033 creator A5080468097 @default.
- W282615033 date "2004-07-01" @default.
- W282615033 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W282615033 title "Animal Use in the Georgia Pine Barrens: An Example from the Hartford Site (9Pu1)" @default.
- W282615033 cites W143266002 @default.
- W282615033 cites W1650821697 @default.
- W282615033 cites W1765218067 @default.
- W282615033 cites W1987498460 @default.
- W282615033 cites W1993341938 @default.
- W282615033 cites W1994548647 @default.
- W282615033 cites W1996561641 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2019924784 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2031744239 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2078369635 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2081521286 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2090011679 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2096236735 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2127084565 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2262324117 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2318963426 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2325932062 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2328322244 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2331942878 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2334973315 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2496394078 @default.
- W282615033 cites W2610237279 @default.
- W282615033 cites W620591601 @default.
- W282615033 cites W804899783 @default.
- W282615033 cites W872120562 @default.
- W282615033 hasPublicationYear "2004" @default.
- W282615033 type Work @default.
- W282615033 sameAs 282615033 @default.
- W282615033 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W282615033 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W282615033 hasAuthorship W282615033A5050833196 @default.
- W282615033 hasAuthorship W282615033A5080278699 @default.
- W282615033 hasAuthorship W282615033A5080468097 @default.
- W282615033 hasConcept C127313418 @default.
- W282615033 hasConcept C151730666 @default.
- W282615033 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W282615033 hasConcept C185734153 @default.
- W282615033 hasConcept C18903297 @default.
- W282615033 hasConcept C203174812 @default.
- W282615033 hasConcept C205649164 @default.
- W282615033 hasConcept C41335879 @default.
- W282615033 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W282615033 hasConcept C97137747 @default.
- W282615033 hasConceptScore W282615033C127313418 @default.
- W282615033 hasConceptScore W282615033C151730666 @default.
- W282615033 hasConceptScore W282615033C166957645 @default.
- W282615033 hasConceptScore W282615033C185734153 @default.
- W282615033 hasConceptScore W282615033C18903297 @default.
- W282615033 hasConceptScore W282615033C203174812 @default.
- W282615033 hasConceptScore W282615033C205649164 @default.
- W282615033 hasConceptScore W282615033C41335879 @default.
- W282615033 hasConceptScore W282615033C86803240 @default.
- W282615033 hasConceptScore W282615033C97137747 @default.
- W282615033 hasIssue "1" @default.
- W282615033 hasLocation W2826150331 @default.
- W282615033 hasOpenAccess W282615033 @default.
- W282615033 hasPrimaryLocation W2826150331 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W1492259405 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W1883112 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2062702353 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2072502770 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2116653782 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2141234624 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2158770204 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2176073020 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2189432538 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2221679624 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2249519845 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2259665129 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2320565495 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2321479243 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2324172870 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2324181543 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2328347686 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2477134506 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W2529020010 @default.
- W282615033 hasRelatedWork W579042772 @default.
- W282615033 hasVolume "23" @default.
- W282615033 isParatext "false" @default.
- W282615033 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W282615033 magId "282615033" @default.
- W282615033 workType "article" @default.