30.04.2014 Views

Northeast Subsistence-Settlement Change: A.D. 700 –1300

Northeast Subsistence-Settlement Change: A.D. 700 –1300

Northeast Subsistence-Settlement Change: A.D. 700 –1300

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Perrelli, D. J. (1994). Gender, Mobility, and <strong>Subsistence</strong> in Iroquois<br />

Prehistory: An Ethnohistorical Approach to Archaeological<br />

Interpretation. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department<br />

of Anthropology, State University of New York at<br />

Buffalo, Buffalo, New York.<br />

Pilon, J., and Perkins, R. (editors) (1997). Home Is Where the<br />

Hearth Is: The Contribution of Small Sites to Our<br />

Understanding of Ontario’s Past. The Ottawa Chapter of<br />

the Ontario Archaeological Society, Ottawa, Ontario.<br />

Pope, M. (2000). Report on the Microwear Analysis of Chipped Stone<br />

Artifacts Recovered from Park Creek II. Manuscript on file,<br />

Public Archaeology Facility at Binghamton University,<br />

Binghamton, New York.<br />

Prentice, G. (1985). Economic differentiation among<br />

Mississippian farmsteads. Midcontinental Journal of<br />

Archaeology 10:77-122.<br />

Prezzano, S. (1992). Longhouse, Village, and Palisade: Community<br />

Patterns at the Iroquois Southern Door. Unpublished Ph.D.<br />

dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Binghamton<br />

University-SUNY, Binghamton, New York.<br />

Prezzano, S. (1996). Household and community: the development<br />

of Iroquois agricultural village life. Journal of Middle<br />

Atlantic Archaeology 12:7-16.<br />

Prezzano, S. (1997). Warfare, Women, and Households: The<br />

Development of Iroquois Culture. In Women in Prehistory,<br />

edited by C. Claassen and R. Joyce, pp. 88-99. University<br />

of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.<br />

Ritchie, W. A., and Funk, R. E. (1973). Aboriginal <strong>Settlement</strong><br />

Patterns in the <strong>Northeast</strong>. Memoir 20. New York State<br />

Museum and Science Service, State Education<br />

Department, Albany, New York.<br />

Rogers, J. (1995). The archaeological analysis of domestic organization.<br />

In Mississippian Communities and Households, edited<br />

by J. D. Rogers and B. D. Smith, pp. 7-31. University of<br />

Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.<br />

Roseberry, W. (1989). Anthropologies and Histories. Rutgers<br />

University Press, New Brunswick, New Jersey.<br />

Sassaman, K. (1992). Lithic technology and the hunter-gatherer<br />

sexual division of labor. North American Archaeologist<br />

13:249-262.<br />

Schiffer, M. (1987). Formation Processes of the Archaeological<br />

Record. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.<br />

Schiffer, M. (1995). Toward the identification of formation<br />

processes. In Behavioral Archaeology: First Principles, pp.<br />

171-195. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.<br />

Reprinted from 1983 American Antiquity 48:675-706.<br />

Seymour, D., and Schiffer, M. (1987). A preliminary analysis of<br />

pithouse assemblages from Snaketown, Arizona. In<br />

Method and Theory for Activity Area Research: An<br />

Ethnoarchaeological Approach, edited by S. Kent, pp.<br />

549-603. Columbia University Press, New York.<br />

Snow, D. R. (1994). The Iroquois. Blackwell, Cambridge,<br />

Massachusetts.<br />

Snow, D. R. (1995). Migration in prehistory: the northern<br />

Iroquoian case. American Antiquity 60:59-79.<br />

Snow, D. R. (1996). More on migration in prehistory: accommodating<br />

new evidence in the northern Iroquoian case.<br />

American Antiquity 61:791-796.<br />

Stahl, A. (1985). The Dohack Site. American Bottom Archaeology,<br />

FAI-270 Site Reports, vol. 12. University of Illinois Press,<br />

Urbana.<br />

Starna, W., and Funk, R. (1994). The place of the in situ hypothesis<br />

in Iroquoian archaeology. <strong>Northeast</strong> Anthropology<br />

47:45-54.<br />

Stewart, M. (1977). Pits in the <strong>Northeast</strong>: a typological analysis.<br />

In Current Perspectives in <strong>Northeast</strong>ern Archaeology, edited<br />

by R. E. Funk and C. F. Hayes, pp.149-164. Researches<br />

and Transactions 17(1), New York State Archaeological<br />

Association, Rochester.<br />

Stuiver, M.,Reimer, P.J., Bard, E., Beck, J.W., Burr, G.S., Hughen,<br />

K.A., Kromer, B., McCormac, F.G., v.d. Plicht, J., and<br />

Spurk, M. (1998). INTCAL98 Radiocarbon age calibration<br />

24,000 - 0 cal BP. Radiocarbon 40:1041-1083.<br />

Thwaites, R. (1896-1901). The Jesuit Relations and Allied<br />

Documents. Burrows Brothers, Cleveland.<br />

Tooker, E. (1964). An Ethnography of the Huron Indians, 1615-1649.<br />

Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 190,<br />

Washington, D. C.<br />

Tringham, R. (1991). Households with faces: the challenge of<br />

gender in prehistoric architectural remains. In<br />

Engendering Archaeology: Women and Prehistory, edited by<br />

J. Gero and M. Conkey, pp. 93-131. Basil Blackwell,<br />

Oxford, England.<br />

Tuck, J. (1971). Onondaga Iroquois Prehistory. Syracuse University<br />

Press, Syracuse, New York.<br />

Versaggi, N. (1987). Hunter-Gatherer <strong>Settlement</strong> Models and the<br />

Archaeological Record: A Test Case from the Upper<br />

Susquehanna Valley of New York. Ph.D. dissertation,<br />

Department of Anthropology, Binghamton<br />

University-SUNY, Binghamton, New York.<br />

Versaggi, N. (1996a). Hunter-Gatherer adaptations in the Upper<br />

Susquehanna: are the uplands part of the picture? Paper<br />

presented at the conference on Integrating Appalachian<br />

Highlands Archaeology. New York State Museum,<br />

Albany.<br />

Versaggi, N. (1996b). Prehistoric hunter-gatherer settlement<br />

models: interpreting the upper Susquehanna Valley. In A<br />

Golden Chronograph for Robert E. Funk, Occasional<br />

Publications in <strong>Northeast</strong>ern Anthropology 15:129-140.<br />

Versaggi, N. (1999). Recent contributions to the archaeology of<br />

central New York: discussion. Paper presented at the 39th<br />

Annual Meeting of the <strong>Northeast</strong>ern Anthropological<br />

Association, Providence, Rhode Island.<br />

Versaggi, N., Cobb, C., and Pope, M. (1996). Data Recovery Plan,<br />

Park Creek I, Park Creek II, and Raish Sites, PIN 9066.41.122,<br />

NYS Route 17 Improvements, Towns of Windsor and<br />

Kirkwood, Broome County, New York. Public Archaeology<br />

Facility, Binghamton University, Binghamton, New York.<br />

Versaggi, N., Wurst, L., Madrigal, T. C., and Lain, A. (2001).<br />

Adding complexity to Late Archaic research in the<br />

<strong>Northeast</strong>ern Appalachians. Archaeology of the<br />

Appalachian Highlands, edited by L. P. Sullivan and S. C.<br />

Prezzano, pp. 121-133. The University of Tennessee Press,<br />

Knoxville.<br />

von Gernet, A. (1982). Interpreting intrasite distribution of artifacts:<br />

the Draper site pipe fragments. Man in the <strong>Northeast</strong><br />

23:49-60.<br />

Chapter 10 Upland Land Use Patterns during the Early Late Prehistoric (A.D. <strong>700</strong><strong>–1300</strong>) 207

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!