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Foraging the Tennessee River Valley, 12,500 to 8,000 Years Ago (Dan Josselyn Memorial Publication)
 
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Foraging the Tennessee River Valley, 12,500 to 8,000 Years Ago (Dan Josselyn Memorial Publication) [Paperback]

Kandace D. Hollenbach (Author)

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Book Description

Dan Josselyn Memorial Publication February 28, 2009
Plants are inarguably a significant component of the diets of foraging peoples in non-arctic environments. As such, the decisions and activities associated with the gathering and exploitation of plants are important to foragers’ subsistence pursuits. Plant remains are particularly important for understanding gathering activities. Inasmuch as plant foods comprised a considerable portion of early foragers’ diets, and the gathering and processing of these plant resources occupied a significant proportion of the population, namely women, children, and the elderly, an understanding of gathering activities and how they relate to use of the landscape is critical. Organic remains are poorly preserved in the acidic soils of the Southeast and are often limited or absent from open-air sites, but archaeological deposits protected within rockshelters provide an exception. Organic remains are consistently well preserved in their rain-protected deposits, and rockshelters are locations that groups repeatedly visited. Because of this repeated use and remarkable preservation, significant quantities of well-preserved faunal and botanical remains can be recovered from rockshelter deposits. 
 
In Foraging, Hollenbach analyzes and compares botanical remains from archaeological excavations in four rockshelters in the Middle Tennessee River Valley. The artifact assemblages of rockshelter and open-air sites are similar, so it is reasonable to assume that faunal and botanical assemblages would be similar, if open-air sites had comparable preservation of organic remains. The rich organic data recovered from rockshelters therefore may be considered representative of general subsistence and settlement strategies, and can significantly inform our views of lifeways of Late Paleoindian and Early Archaic peoples. The data produced from this analysis provides a valuable baseline of plant food use by early foragers in the region, and establishes a model of Late Paleoindian and Early Archaic lifeways in the Southeast.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Solid traditional archaeology that hits all the bases and will interest researchers in several subdisciplines.”—Leslie L. Bush, Macrobotanical Analysis


“A significant study on several levels: as the first major archaeobotanical study of Paleoindian and Early Archaic period sites in the Southeast, as an application of foraging theory to archaeobotanical data, and as an archaeological analysis of subsistence as a diverse set of practices rather than a body of group-level norms.”—Kristen Gremillion, Ohio State University

About the Author

Kandace Detwiler Hollenbach is a Research Assistant Professor at Archaeological Research Laboratory, University of Tennessee.

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