Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 24
pro vyhledávání: '"Mark F. Seeman"'
Autor:
Mark F. Seeman, Kevin C. Nolan
Publikováno v:
American Antiquity. 88:144-162
Ohio Hopewell is an archaeological concept that is known worldwide but that suffers from “a disarray of radiocarbon results” (Lynott 2015:60). Here, we establish a comprehensive dataset of 425 14C dates from Ohio Hopewell sites and apply formal c
Publikováno v:
American Antiquity. 86:864-866
Diez-Martin and colleagues (2021) experimentally reduce four bifaces and argue that the resultant flakes are smaller and less uniform than those found at the Welling site (33Co2). Welling is an early Paleoindian (Clovis) site excavated by Olaf Prufer
Publikováno v:
American Antiquity. 85:113-131
Hunter-gatherer societies held sway in midwestern North America for at least 11,000 years. Those at the end of this period were more complex and less mobile, and they supported larger populations than those at the beginning, but there are relatively
Publikováno v:
Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences. 10:1193-1205
In prehistoric North America, artifacts of copper occupy a position of prominence in the Hopewell societies of Ohio’s Scioto Valley. These artifacts also represent the social contacts and long-distance interactions that brought copper to the Scioto
Autor:
Mark F. Seeman, Michael J. Shott
Publikováno v:
American Antiquity. 82:723-741
How much stone tools are reduced and their form changed from first use to discard bears upon issues such as typological integrity, curation rate, and effects of occupation span. But degree of reduction depends partly upon the measures used to gauge i
Autor:
Stuart E. Nealis, Mark F. Seeman
Publikováno v:
Southeastern Archaeology. 34:57-70
This study investigates comparatively the prospect that excessive dental wear in certain Late Archaic populations in eastern North America was caused by extensive shellfish consumption and the associated ingestion of grit. Specifically, the amount an
Autor:
Michael J. Shott, Mark F. Seeman
Publikováno v:
Quaternary International. 361:319-331
Reduction, recycling, and other changes that stone tools experienced during their use lives reflect design, circumstance and opportunity. The result is discarded artifacts whose sizes and shapes are plain to see and easy to measure. If we can infer t
Publikováno v:
American Antiquity. 78:407-432
This study is an investigation of tool design and the organization of work. Here we further test Wilmsen’s (1970) conclu sion that early Paleoindian tools— specifically, hafted end scrapers— were redesigned to facilitate the processing of a bro
Autor:
Nils E. Nilsson, Garry L. Summers, Elaine Dowd, Margaret E. Newman, Paul J. Barans, Larry Morris, Mark F. Seeman
Publikováno v:
Journal of Archaeological Science. 35:2742-2750
Blood protein analysis provides a method for acquiring and interpreting archaeological data bearing on human–animal relationships. The present study makes use of cross-over immunoelectrophoresis (CIEP) and a large sample of stone tools (N = 130) fr
Publikováno v:
Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology. 32:297-329
We describe and analyze blade production at a small site near the Turner Earthworks, Hamilton County, Ohio. The Turner Workshop provides perhaps the largest sample of Ohio Hopewell (ca. A.D. 50–350) blades and blade-cores recovered from a single si