Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 19
pro vyhledávání: '"Rob Q. Cuthrell"'
Autor:
Rob Q. Cuthrell, Michael A. Grone, Paul M. Engel, Kenneth W. Gobalet, Kent G. Lightfoot, Roberta A. Jewett, Gabriel M. Sanchez
Publikováno v:
Journal of Archaeological Science. 100:1-15
Archaeological sites represent long-term biological repositories, relevant for understanding ancient economies and ways of life that can provide historical baseline data for contemporary conservation biology, restoration ecology, and fisheries manage
Autor:
Nicholas Tripcevich, Rob Q. Cuthrell, Scott Byram, Peter Nelson, Roberta A. Jewett, Kent G. Lightfoot, E. Breck Parkman, Jun Sunseri
Publikováno v:
Historical Archaeology, vol 52, iss 2
Recent advances in mission archaeology advocate for studies beyond the mission church and quadrangle in order to better understand their spatial organizations and how they were embedded within the landscapes of indigenous populations. This raises the
Autor:
Rob Q. Cuthrell, Rand R. Evett
Publikováno v:
Quaternary International. 434:78-90
Expanding on a previous study that used phytolith analysis and other evidence to show that native people within Quiroste Valley on California's Central Coast used frequent fire to actively manage vegetation by arresting succession toward shrubs or fo
Autor:
Rob Q. Cuthrell, Loren V. Murch
Publikováno v:
Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. 9:695-704
Archaeobotanists have used techniques including sonication and acid dissolution to recover starch granules from artifacts for over a decade, however there has been little published research on the effects of these extraction procedures on starch gran
Publikováno v:
Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports. 6:451-462
Excavations in the Native rancheria at Mission Santa Clara, California, recovered a large assemblage of predominantly uncharred archaeological tobacco seeds, including many morphologically intact specimens, associated with deposits from ca. 1790–18
Autor:
Rand R. Evett, Rob Q. Cuthrell
Publikováno v:
Journal of Archaeological Science. 68:70-78
Although automated approaches to shape analysis and object classification have been widely applied in the biological sciences, technical and time considerations have limited their use in phytolith research. As advanced microscopy systems become more
Autor:
Rob Q. Cuthrell, Kent G. Lightfoot
Publikováno v:
The Holocene. 25:1581-1587
This paper examines the hypothesis that human landscape modifications involving early agriculture contributed to greenhouse gas emissions in preindustrial times, a proposal that has significant implications for the timing of the Anthropocene era. In
Autor:
Rob Q. Cuthrell, Anna Harkey, Katherine L. Chiou, Payson Sheets, Christine A. Hastorf, Alan Farahani, Shanti Morell-Hart
Publikováno v:
Social Perspectives on Ancient Lives from Paleoethnobotanical Data ISBN: 9783319528472
Spatial analyses at the resolution of an archaeological site are usually complicated by the fact that objects and organic remains uncovered through excavation are often not found in their original location of manufacture, use, or even discard. As a r
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_________::f3c00cd047d5aa14140b499d980666e2
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-52849-6_5
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-52849-6_5
Autor:
Mark G. Hylkema, Rob Q. Cuthrell
Publikováno v:
California Archaeology. 5:225-245
The ethnographic Quiroste tribe has been described as the most powerful tribe on the San Francisco Peninsular coast (Milliken 1991:186). Archaeological and historical information from within their ancestral territory, especially at Ano Nuevo State Pa
Autor:
Rob Q. Cuthrell, Rand R. Evett
Publikováno v:
California Archaeology. 5:319-335
Phytoliths are microscopic particles of silica formed in many plant taxa, particularly grasses. To better understand the extent of grass-dominated vegetation and the utilization of grasses by indigenous peoples in Quiroste Valley on the central coast