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Prehistoric Life on the Mississippi Floodplain: Stone Tool Use, Settlement Organization, and Subsistence Practices at the Labras Lake Site, Illinois (Prehistoric Archeology and Ecology series)
 
 
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Prehistoric Life on the Mississippi Floodplain: Stone Tool Use, Settlement Organization, and Subsistence Practices at the Labras Lake Site, Illinois (Prehistoric Archeology and Ecology series) [Paperback]

Richard W. Yerkes (Author)

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Book Description

0226951510 978-0226951515 December 1, 1986 paper edition
At the confluence of the Illinois, the Missouri, and the Mississippi Rivers lies the "American Bottom," a broad floodplain that prehistoric peoples inhabited for millennia. Precisely how did they live? What were their ties to the natural world around them? In this study, based upon some six years of intensive archeological and geological research at Labras Lake in St. Clair County, Illinois, Richard W. Yerkes interprets a wealth of important new data in a stimulating and original fashion.

With a fine-tuned control of the data, Yerkes challenges prevailing theories based on simple classifications of stone tools according to shape or on simple models of diffuse and focal economies. He views environment as a dynamic factor in economic and cultural life, rather than as merely a backdrop to it. Using incident light microscopy, he examines wear patterns on stone tools to determine what activities were performed during each period the site was inhabited—the Late Archaic, the Late Woodland, and the Mississippian. As he documents environmental change at Labras Lake, he analyzes plant and animal remains in context to explore diet and seasonal patterns of subsistence and settlement.

The result is a more accurate and detailed picture than ever before what prehistoric life on the Mississippi floodplain was like. Yerkes shows how to assess the duration and size of occupations and how to determine where and when true permanent settlements arose. What others call "sedentary encampments" he reveals as sequences of small residental occupations for a narrow range of activities during shorter, seasonal periods. His contribution to the study of the development of sedentism is potentially far-reaching and will interest many North American anthropologists and archeologists.

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About the Author

Richard W. Yerkes is assistant professor of anthropology at Ohio State University.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Archeologists have been studying subsistence change in the midwestern United States for over a century, and a copious amount of data on prehistoric plant and animal exploitation has been complied. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
hide disagree, central excavation block, lithic refits, paleomeander belt, microwear results, unretouched blanks, wood disagree, bluff component, microwear traces, engrave bone, plant knives, microwear data, corn gloss, hoe chips, unretouched flake, core trimming flake, upstream limb, keyhole structures, tool morphology, microwear evidence, chert microdrill, knotweed seeds, lithic manufacturing, notched flake, carbonized maize
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Mississippi River, Goose Lake, Prairie Lake, Pittsburg Lake, Hill Lake, Early Woodland, Retouched Flake Straight-edged Knife, Go-Kart North, Middle Woodland, Horseshoe Lake, Cahokia Interpretive Center Tract, Falling Springs, Wood Graver, Perforator Drill, Unretouched Flake Fea, Riverton Culture, United States, Retouched Flake Round-edged Knife, Stolle Quarry, Lower Mississippi Valley, Lower Illinois Valley, Microwear Analysis Disagree, Multiple Tool Notch, Total Tools, Henry Formation
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