Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-m6dg7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T11:31:39.730Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Pots and Pox: The Identification of Protohistoric Epidemics in the Upper Mississippi Valley

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Colin M. Betts*
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Social Work, Luther College, Decorah, IA 52101

Abstract

Exogenous diseases represent one of the principal agents of culture change associated with the historic period, yet the timing of their initial influence remains undocumented in many regions of North America. Settlement variables, cooking pot volume, and mortality profiles from Oneota tradition occupations are used to investigate the possible occurrence of epidemics in the Upper Mississippi River valley. Synchronous fluctuations in settlement and ceramic variables indicate that following at least two centuries of population growth a significant population decline occurred in the early seventeenth century. Several factors provide support for the role of disease in this decline, including its timing, magnitude, and the documented presence of epidemics in adjacent regions combined with substantial evidence for extensive contact with those areas. This event, prior to direct, sustained contact, is associated with the increased intensity of intergroup exchange occurring with the fur trade. The ability to identify the occurrence of such epidemics is essential for understanding protohistoric cultural dynamics as well as the transmission of disease on a continental level.

Las enfermedades exógenas representan uno de los principales agentes de cambio cultural relacionados con una época histórica, aún queda por documentar la cronología de su impacto inicial en muchas regiones de Norteamérica. Este estudio utiliza las variables de asentamiento, el volumen de las ollas de cocción, y datos de la mortalidad para investigar la posible ocurrencia de epidemias en la cultura Oneota del valle del Alto Río Mississippi. Las fluctuaciones sincrónicas de variables tanto en los asentamientos como en la cerámica indican que por lo menos después de dos siglos de aumento de población, hubo una notable disminución de la misma en la primera parte del siglo XVII. Hay varios factores que corroboran el papel de las enfermedades durante este período de reducción de población, incluyendo sus fechas de aparición, magnitud y evidencia documental sobre la presencia de epidemias en regiones adyacentes, junto con una abundante evidencia de contactos extensos con estas áreas. Este fenómeno de disminución, ocurrido antes del contacto directo y sostenido, se asocia con una mayor intensidad de intercambios entre grupos relacionados con el trueque de pieles. Identificar la ocurrencia de tales epidemias es fundamental para comprender tanto la dinámica cultural protohistórica como la transmisión de enfermedades por todo el continente.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 2006

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Allen, Kathleen M. S. 1992 Iroquois Ceramic Production: A Case Study of Household-Level Organization. In Ceramic Production and Distribution: An Integrated Approach, edited by George J. Bey III and Christopher A. Pool, pp. 133154. Westview Press, Boulder, Colorado.Google Scholar
Anderson, Adrian, Westover, Allan, Martin, Terrance J., Murray, Mathew L., Myster, Susan M. T., O’Connell, Barbara, and Anthony Zalucha, L. 1995 The State Road Coulee Site: 47 LC 116. The Wisconsin Archeologist 76:48230.Google Scholar
Arnold, Philip J. 1991 Domestic Ceramic Production and Spatial Organization: A Mexican Case Study in Ethnoarchaeology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Arzigian, Constance. M. 1989 The Pammel Creek Site Floral Remains. The Wisconsin Archeologist 70:111156.Google Scholar
Arzigian, Constance. M. 1994 Charred Plant Remains: The Gunderson Site. Journal of the Iowa Archeological Society 41:5258.Google Scholar
Arzigian, Constance M., and Boszhardt, Robert. F. 1989 Introduction, Environmental Setting and History of Investigations at the Pammel Creek Site. The Wisconsin Archeologist 70:140.Google Scholar
Arzigian, Constance M., Boszhardt, Robert F., Theler, James L., Rodell, Roland L., and Scott, Michael J. 1989 Summary of the Pammel Creek Site Analysis and a Proposed Oneota Seasonal Round. The Wisconsin Archeologist 70:273280.Google Scholar
Arzigian, Constance M., Boszhardt, Robert F., Halverson, Holly P., and Theler, James L. 1994 The Gundersen Site: An Oneota Village and Cemetery in La Crosse, Wisconsin. Journal of the Iowa Archeological Society 41:375.Google Scholar
Asch, David L., and Brown, James A. 1990 Stratigraphy and Site Chronology. In At the Edge of Prehistory: Huber Phase Archaeology in the Chicago Area, edited by James A. Brown and Patricia J. O’Brien, pp. 174185. Center for American Archaeology, Kampsville, Illinois.Google Scholar
Bamforth, Douglas B. 1990 An Empirical Perspective on Little Ice Age Climatic Change on the Great Plains. Plains Anthropologist 35:359366.Google Scholar
Benn, David W. 1989 Hawks, Serpents, and Birdmen: Emergence of the Oneota Mode of Production. Plains Anthropologist 34:233260.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benn, David W. (editor) 2005 Draft of The Hartley Bridge Project Excavations at the Wild Sites 13AM403, 13AM404, and 13AM405 Allamakee County, Iowa. Bear Creek Archeology, Inc. Prepared for the Office of Allamakee County Engineer. Copies available from Bear Creek Archeology, Cresco, Iowa.Google Scholar
Betts, Colin M. 1998 The Oneota Orr Phase: Space, Time, and Ethnicity. The Wisconsin Archeologist 79:225235.Google Scholar
Betts, Colin M. 2000 Symbolic, Cognitive, and Technological Dimensions of Orr Phase Oneota Ceramics. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Illinois, Urbana. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Betts, Colin M. 2002 Earthworks and Epidemics: Mound Construction as a Response to Protohistoric Depopulation. Paper Presented at the 67th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Denver, Colorado.Google Scholar
Betts, Colin M. 2003 Protohistoric Oneota Mound Construction: An Early Revitalization Movement. Paper Presented at the 49th Annual Midwest Archaeology Meeting, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.Google Scholar
Betts, Colin M. 2004 Preliminary Report of Investigations at Site 13AM18A. Prepared for the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. Copies available from the Luther College Anthropology Laboratory, Decorah, Iowa.Google Scholar
Blaine, Martha R. 1979 The loway Indians. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.Google Scholar
Blair, Emma H. 1911 Indian Tribes of the Upper Mississippi and the Great Lakes Region, Vol. I. Arthur J. Clark, Cleveland.Google Scholar
Blakely, Robert L., and Detweiler-Blakely, Bettina 1989 The Impact of European Diseases in the Sixteenth-Century Southeast: A Case Study. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 14:6289.Google Scholar
Blasingham, Emily 1956 The Depopulation of the Illinois Indians. Ethnohistory 3:193412.Google Scholar
Borah, Woodrow W. 1976 The Historical Demography of Aboriginal and Colonial America: An Attempt at Perspective. In The Native Population of the Americas in 1492, edited by William M. Denevan, pp. 1334. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.Google Scholar
Boszhardt, Robert F. 1994 Oneota Group Continuity at La Crosse: The Brice Prairie, Pammel Creek, and Valley View Phases. The Wisconsin Archeologist 75:173236.Google Scholar
Boszhardt, Robert F. 1998 Oneota Horizons: A La Crosse Perspective. The Wisconsin Archeologist 79:195224.Google Scholar
Boszhardt, Robert F. 2000 Turquoise, Rasps, and Heartlines: the Oneota Bison Pull. In Mounds, Modoc, and Mesoamerica: Papers in Honor of Melvin L. Fowler, edited by Steven R. Ahler, pp. 361373. Illinois State Museum Scientific Papers, vol. XXVIII. Springfield.Google Scholar
Boszhardt, Robert F., Holtz, Wendy, and Nienow, Jeremy 1995 A Compilation of Oneota Radiocarbon Dates as of 1995. In Oneota Archaeology: Past, Present, and Future, edited by William Green, pp. 203227. Office of the State Archaeologist Report No. 20. University of Iowa, Iowa City.Google Scholar
Boyd, Robert T. 1992 Population Decline from Two Epidemics on the Northwest Coast. In Disease and Demography in the Americas, edited by John W. Verano and Douglas H. Ubelaker, pp. 249255. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Braun, David P. 1983 Pots as Tools. In Archaeological Hammers and Theories, edited by A. Keene and J. Moore, pp. 107134. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Bray, Robert T. 1961 The Flynn Cemetery: An Orr Focus Oneota Burial Site in Allamakee County. Journal of the Iowa Archeological Society 10:1525.Google Scholar
Brown, James A. 1990 Ground-Stone, Metallic, and Glass Artifacts. In At the Edge of Prehistory: Huber Phase Archaeology in the Chicago Area, edited by James A. Brown and Patricia J. O’Brien, pp. 236240. Center for American Archaeology, Kampsville, Illinois.Google Scholar
Brown, James A., and Sasso, Robert F. 2001 Prelude to History on the Eastern Prairies. In Societies in Eclipse: Archaeology of the Eastern Woodland Indians, A.D. 1400–1700, edited by David S. Brose, C. Wesley Cowan, and Robert C. Mainfort, Jr., pp. 205228. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Bryson, Reid A., and Wendland, Wayne M. 1967 Tentative Climatic Patterns for Some Late Glacial and Post-Glacial Episodes in Central North America. In Life, Land And Water, edited by William J. Mayer-Oakes, pp. 271289. Occasional Papers No. 1. Department of Anthropology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg.Google Scholar
Burnet, Macfarlane, and White, David O. 1972 Natural History of Infectious Disease. 4th ed. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Bushnell, David I. 1922 Villages of the Algonquian, Siouan, and Caddoan Tribes West of the Mississippi. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 77. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Campbell, Sarah K. 1990 PostColumbian Culture History in the Northern Columbia Plateau A.D. 1500–1900. Garland, New York.Google Scholar
Casteel, Richard W. 1979 Relationships between Surface Area and Population Size: A Cautionary Note. American Antiquity 44:803807.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, Jerry 1971 Investigations at the Malone Site. In Prehistoric Investigations, edited by Marshall McKusick, pp. 8085. Office of the State Archaeologist Report No. 3. University of Iowa, Iowa City.Google Scholar
Cook, Sherburne F. 1976 The Population of the California Indians, 1769–1970. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
David, Nicholas, and Hennig, Hilke 1972 The Ethnography of Pottery: A Fulani Case Seen in Archaeological Perspective. McCaleb Module in Anthropology 21. Addison Wesley, Reading, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
DeBoer, Warren R. 1974 Ceramic Longevity and Archaeological Interpretation: An Example for the Upper Ucayali, Peru. American Antiquity 39:335343.Google Scholar
DeBoer, Warren R., and Lathrap, Donald. W. 1979 The Making and Breaking of Shipibo-Conibo Ceramics. In Ethnoarchaeology: Implications of Ethnography for Archaeology, edited by Carol Kramer, pp. 102138. Columbia University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Decker, Jody F. 1991 Depopulation of the Northern Plains Natives. Social Science and Medicine 33:381393.Google Scholar
Dobyns, Henry F. 1966 An Appraisal of Techniques for Estimating Aboriginal American Population with a New Hemispheric Estimate. Current Anthropology 7:395416.Google Scholar
Dobyns, Henry F. 1983 Their Number Become Thinned. The University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Dobyns, Henry F. 1992 Native American Trade Centers as Contagious Disease Foci. In Disease and Demography in the Americas, edited by John W. Verano and Douglas H. Ubelaker, pp. 21522. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D. C.Google Scholar
Dobyns, Henry F. 1999 Review of Numbers from Nowhere: The American Indian Contact Population Debate, by David Henige. The Journal of American History 86:752753.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Drooker, Penelope B. 1997 The View From Madisonville: Protohistoric Western Fort Ancient Interaction Patterns. Memoirs of the Museum of Anthropology No. 31. University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Dunnell, Robert C. 1991 Methodological Impacts of Catastrophic Depopulation on American Archaeology and Ethnology. In Columbian Consequences, Vol. 3: The Spanish Borderlands in Pan-American Perspective, edited by David H. Thomas, pp. 561580. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Ferguson, R. Brian 1995 Yanomami Warfare: A Political History. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Ferguson, R. Brian, and Whitehead, Neil L. 1992 The Violent Edge of Warfare. In War in the Tribal Zone: Expanding States and Indigenous Warfare, edited by R. Brian Ferguson and Neil Whitehead, pp. 130. School of American Research Press, Santa Fe, New Mexico.Google Scholar
Fitting, James E., and Halsey, John R. 1966 Rim Diameter and Vessel Size in Wayne Ware Vessels. Wisconsin Archeologist 47: 208211.Google Scholar
Foster, George M. 1960 Life Expectancy ofUtilitarian Pottery in Tzintzuntzan, Michoacan, Mexico. American Antiquity 25:606609.Google Scholar
Gallagher, James P. 1990 The Farley Village Site 21Hu2, An Oneota/Ioway Site in Houston County, Minnesota. Reports of Investigations No. 117. Mississippi Valley Archaeology Center, University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, La Crosse.Google Scholar
Gallagher, James P. 1992 Prehistoric Field Systems in the Upper Midwest. In Late Prehistoric Agriculture: Observations from the Midwest, edited by William I. Woods, pp. 95135. Studies in Illinois Archaeology No. 8. Illinois Historic Preservation Agency, Springfield.Google Scholar
Gallagher, James P., Boszhardt, Robert F., Sasso, Robert, and Stevenson, Katherine 1985 Oneota Ridged Field Agriculture in Southwestern Wisconsin. American Antiquity 50:605612.Google Scholar
Gallagher, James P., and Sasso, Robert 1987 Investigations into Oneota Ridged Field Agriculture on the Northern Margin of the Prairie Peninsula. Plains Anthropologist 32:141151.Google Scholar
Galloway, P. 1999 Review of Numbers from Nowhere: The American Indian Contact Population Debate, by D. Henige. The American Historical Review 104:867.Google Scholar
Gibbon, Guy E. 1972 Cultural Dynamics and the Development of the Oneota Lifeway in Wisconsin. American Antiquity 37:166185.Google Scholar
Green, William 1993 Examining Protohistoric Depopulation in the Upper Midwest. The Wisconsin Archeologist 74:290323.Google Scholar
Hall, Robert 2003 Rethinking Jean Nicolet’s Route to the Ho-Chunks in 1634. In Theory, Method, and Practice in Modern Archaeology, edited by Robert J. Jeske and Douglas K. Charles, pp. 238251. Praeger, Westport, Connecticut.Google Scholar
Hally, David J. 1986 The Identification of Vessel Function: A Case Study from Northwest Georgia. American Antiquity 52:267295.Google Scholar
Hassan, Fekri A. 1981 Demographic Archaeology. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Hendon, Julia A. 1996 Archaeological Approaches to the Organization of Domestic Labor: Household Practice and Domestic Relations. Annual Review of Anthropology 25:4561.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henige, David P. 1998 Numbers from Nowhere: The American Indian Contact Population Debate. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Oklahoma.Google Scholar
Henning, Dale R. 1998 Oneota: The Western Manifestations. The Wisconsin Archeologist 79:238247.Google Scholar
Henning, Dale R. 2003 Archeology and History of Ioway/Oto Exchange Patterns, 1650–1700. Journal of the lowaArcheological Society 50:199222.Google Scholar
Henning, Dale R., and Thiessen, Thomas D. 2004a Regional Prehistory. In Dhegihan and Chiwere Siouans in the Plains: Historical and Archaeological Perspectives, edited by Dale R. Henning and Thomas D. Thiessen, pp. 381398. Memoir 36. Plains Anthropologist 49 part 2.Google Scholar
Henning, Dale R., and Thiessen, Thomas D. 2004b Summary and Conclusions. In Dhegihan and Chiwere Siouans in the Plains: Historical and Archaeological Perspectives, edited by Dale R. Henning and Thomas D. Thiessen, pp. 381398. Memoir 36. Plains Anthropologist 49 part 2.Google Scholar
Henrickson, Elizabeth F., and McDonald, Mary M. A. 1983 Ceramic Form and Function: An Ethnographic Search and an Archaeological Application. American Anthropologist 85:630645.Google Scholar
Hildebrand, John A., and Hagstram, Melissa B. 1999 New Approaches to Ceramic Use and Discard: Cooking Pottery from the Peruvian Andes in Ethnoarchaeological Perspective. Latin American Antiquity 10:2546.Google Scholar
Hollinger, R. Eric 1995 Residence Patterns and Oneota Cultural Dynamics. In Oneota Archaeology: Past, Present, and Future, edited by W. Green, pp. 141174. Office of the State Archaeologist Report No. 20. University of Iowa, Iowa City.Google Scholar
Hunt, George T. 1940 The Wars of the Iroquois: A Study in Intertribal Relations. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.Google Scholar
Jenkins, John T., and Semken, Holmes A. 1971–1972 Faunal Analysis of the Lane Enclosure, Allamakee County, Iowa. Proceedings of the Iowa Academy of Science 78:7679.Google Scholar
Johanessen, Sissel 1993 Food, Dishes, and Society in the Mississippi Valley. In Foraging and Farming in the Eastern Woodlands, edited by C. M. Scarry, pp. 182205. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Kroeber, Alfred L. 1934 Native American Population. American Anthropologist 36:125.Google Scholar
Kvamme, Kenneth L. 1997 A Wider View of the Relationship between Settlement Size and Population in the Peruvian Andes. American Antiquity 62:719722.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Larsen, Clark S. 1994 In the Wake of Columbus: Native Population Biology in the Postcontact Americas. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 31:109154.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Longacre, William A. 1985 Pottery Use-Life Among the Kalinga, Northern Luzon, the Philippines. In Decoding Prehistoric Ceramics, edited by B. Nelson, pp. 334346. Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Lovell, W. George 2002 Review of Numbers from Nowhere: The American Indian Contact Population Debate, by D. Henige. Ethnohistory 49:468470.Google Scholar
Lurie, Nancy O. 1960 Winnebago Protohistory. In Culture in History, edited by S. Diamond, pp. 790808. Columbia University Press, New York.Google Scholar
McKusick, Marshall B. 1973 The Grant Oneota Village. Office of the State Archeologist Report No. 4. University of Iowa, Iowa City.Google Scholar
Mason, Ronald J. 1986 Rock Island, Historical Indian Archaeology in the Northern Lake Michigan Basin. Special Paper 6. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology, Kent State University Press, Kent, Ohio.Google Scholar
Mason, Ronald J. 1993 Oneota and Winnebago Ethnogenesis: An Overview. The Wisconsin Archeologist 74:400421.Google Scholar
Maurer, Noel 2000 Review of Numbers from Nowhere: The American Indian Contact Population Debate, by D. Henige. The Hispanic American Historical Review 80:166167.Google Scholar
Merbs, Charles F. 1992 A New World of Infectious Disease. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 35:342.Google Scholar
Meyer, Roy W. 1999 Review of Numbers from Nowhere: The American Indian Contact Population Debate, by David Henige. The Western Historical Quarterly 30:396397.Google Scholar
Milner, George M. 1980 Epidemic Disease in the Postcontact Southeast: A Reappraisal. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 5:3956.Google Scholar
Milner, George R., Anderson, David G., and Smith, Marvin T. 2001 Distribution of Eastern Woodlands Peoples at the Prehistoric and Historic Interface. In Societies in Eclipse: Archaeology of the Eastern Woodland Indians, A.D. 1400–1700, edited by David S. Brose, C. Wesley Cowan, and Robert C. Mainfort, Jr., pp. 918. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Mott, Mildred 1938 The Relation of Historic Indian Tribes to Archaeological Manifestations in Iowa. Iowa Journal of History and Politics 23:353362.Google Scholar
Nelson, Ben A. 1981 Ethnoarchaeology and Paleodemography: A Test of Turner and Lofgrens’s Hypothesis. Journal of Anthropological Research 37:107129.Google Scholar
Nelson, Ben A. 1985 Reconstructing Ceramic Vessels and their Systemic Contexts. In Decoding Prehistoric Ceramics, edited by Ben A. Nelson, pp. 310329. Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Nelson, Ben A. 1991 Ceramic Frequency and Use-Life: A Highland Maya Case in Cross-Cultural Perspective. In Ceramic Ethnoarchaeology, edited by William A. Longacre, pp. 162181. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Newson, Linda A. 2000 Review of Numbers from Nowhere: The American Indian Contact Population Debate, by David Henige, Journal of Latin American Studies 32:265297.Google Scholar
Noble, David C. 1999 Review of Numbers from Nowhere: The American Indian Contact Population Debate, by David Henige. Journal of Interdisciplinary History 30:516520.Google Scholar
O’Gorman, Jodie 1993 The Tremaine Site Complex: Oneota Occupation in the La Crosse Locality, Wisconsin. Volume 1: The OT Site (47Lc–262). Museum Archaeology Program Archaeology Research Series No. 1. State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
O’Gorman, Jodie 1994 The Tremaine Site Complex: Oneota Occupation in the La Crosse Locality, Wisconsin Vol. 2: The Filler Site (47 Lc-149). Museum Archaeology ProgramArchaeology Research Series No. 2. State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
O’Gorman, Jodie 1995 The Tremaine Site Complex: Oneota Occupation in the La Crosse Locality, Wisconsin Volume 3: The Tremaine Site (47 Lc-95). Museum Archaeology Program Archaeology Research Series No. 3. State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
Overstreet, David F. 1993 McCauley, Astor, And Hanson – Candidates for the Provisional Dandy Phase. The Wisconsin Archeologist 74:120196.Google Scholar
Overstreet, David F. 1995 The Eastern Wisconsin Oneota Regional Continuity. In Oneota Archaeology: Past, Present, and Future, edited by W. Green, pp. 3364. Office of the State Archaeologist Report No. 20. University of Iowa, Iowa City.Google Scholar
Owsley, Douglas W. 1992 Demography of Prehistoric andEarly Historic Northern Plains Populations. In Disease and Demography in the Americas, edited by J. H. Verano and D. H. Ubelaker, pp. 7586. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Penman, John T. 1988 Neo-Boreal Climatic Influences on the Late Prehistoric Agricultural Groups in the Upper Mississippi Valley. Geoarchaeology 3:139145.Google Scholar
Perttula, Timothy K. 1989 European Contact and Its Effects on Aboriginal Caddoan Populations between A.D. 1520 and A.D. 1680. In Columbian Consequences, vol. 3: The Spanish Borderlands in Pan American Perspective, edited by D. H. Thomas, pp. 501518. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Perttula, Timothy K. 1992 The Caddo Nation: Archaeological and Ethnohistoric Perspectives. University of Texas Press, Austin.Google Scholar
Pratt, Daniel R. 1994 A Carbon Isotope Analysis of Fifty-Nine Burials from the Upper Mississippi River Valley. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.Google Scholar
Radin, Paul 1923 The Winnebago Tribe. Thirty-seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology, pp. 33560. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Ramenofsky, Anne F. 1987 Vectors of Death: The Archaeology of European Contact. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Ramenofsky, Anne F. 1990 Loss of Innocence: Explanations of Differential Persistence in the Sixteenth-Century Southeast. In Columbian Consequences, Vol. 2: Archaeological and Historical Perspectives on the Spanish Borderlands East, edited by David J. Thomas, pp. 3148. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Ramenofsky, Anne F. 1996 The Problem of Introduced Infectious Diseases in New Mexico: A.D. 1540–1680. Journal of Anthropological Research 52:161184.Google Scholar
Reid, Kenneth C. 1989 A Materials Science Perspective on Hunter-Gatherer Pottery. In Pottery Technology: Ideas and Approaches, edited by Gordon Bronitsky, pp. 167177. Westview Press, Boulder, Colorado.Google Scholar
Reid, Kenneth C. 1990 Simmering Down: A Second Look at Ralph Linton’s “North American Cooking Pots.” Nevada State Museum Anthropological Papers 23:818.Google Scholar
Reimer, Paula J., Baillie, Mike G. L., Bard, Edouard, Bayliss, Alex, Warren Beck, J., Bertrand, Chanda J. H., Blackwell, Paul G., Buck, Caitlin E., Burr, George S., Cutler, Kirsten B., Damon, Paul E., Lawrence Edwards, R., Fairbanks, Richard G., Friedrich, Michael, Guilderson, Thomas P., Hogg, Alan G., Hughen, Konrad A., Kromer, Bernd, McCormac, Gerry, Manning, Sturt, Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Reimer, Ron W, Remmele, Sabine, Southon, John R., Stuiver, Minze, Talamo, Sahra, Taylor, F. W., van der Plicht, Johannes, Weyhenmeyer, Constanze E. 2004 IntCal04 Terrestrial Radiocarbon Age Calibration, 0–26 cal kyr BP. Radiocarbon 46:10291058.Google Scholar
Rice, Prudence 1987 Pottery Analysis: A Sourcebook. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Riley, Thomas J., and Freimuth, George 1979 Field Systems and Frost Drainage in the Prehistoric Agriculture of the Upper Great Lakes Area. American Antiquity 44:271285.Google Scholar
Rodell, Roland L. 2000 Patterns of Oneota Settlement Within the Middle Portion of the Upper Mississippi Valley. In Mounds, Modoc, and Mesoamerica: Papers in Honor ofMelvin L Fowler, edited by Steven R. Ahler, pp. 375404. Illinois State Museum Scientific Papers Vol. XXVIII. Springfield.Google Scholar
Rosenblat, Angel 1976 The Population of Hispaniola at the Time of Columbus. In The Native Population of the Americas in 1492, edited by William H. Denevan, pp. 4366. University of Wisconsin Press, Madison.Google Scholar
Sasso, Robert 1993 LaCrosse Region Oneota Adaptation: Changing Late Prehistoric Subsistence and Settlement Patterns in the Upper Mississippi Valley. The Wisconsin Archeologist 74:324369.Google Scholar
Schacht, Robert M. 1981a Estimating Past Population Trends. Annual Review of Anthropology 10:119140.Google Scholar
Schacht, Robert M. 1981b Two Models of Population Growth. American Anthropologist 82:782798.Google Scholar
Schermer, Shirley J. 1993 Northeast Iowa Oneota Mortuary Patterns. Paper Presented at the Oneota Mortuary Studies Symposium, 49th Annual Midwest Archaeology Conference, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.Google Scholar
Schermer, Shirley J., Forman, Linda, Lillie, Robin M., Robinson, Jill, and Zimmerman, Larry 1998 NAGPRA Inventory and Consultation: Human Remains and Funerary Objects in the Charles R. Keyes Collection. Office of the State Archaeologist Research Papers Volume 23, University of Iowa, Iowa City.Google Scholar
Senior, Louise M., and Birnie, Dunbar P. 1995 Accurately Estimating Vessel Volume from Profile Illustrations. American Antiquity 60:319334.Google Scholar
Shott, Michael J. 1992 Radiocarbon Dating as a Probablistic Technique: The Childers Site and Late Woodland Occupation in the Ohio Valley. American Antiquity 57:202230.Google Scholar
Shott, Michael J. 1996 Mortal Pots: On Use Life and Vessel Size in the Formation of Ceramic Assemblages American Antiquity 61:463482.Google Scholar
Shott, Michael J., Tiffany, Joseph A., Doershuk, John, and Titcomb, Jason 2002 The Reliability of Surface Assemblages: Recent Results from the Gillett Grove Site, Clay County, Iowa. Plains Anthropologist 47:165182.Google Scholar
Skinner, Alanson 1926 Ethnology of the Ioway Indians. Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee 5:181354.Google Scholar
Smith, Marvin T. 1987 Archaeology of Aboriginal Culture Change in the Interior Southeast: Depopulation during the Early Historic Period. University Presses of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R. 1992 Disease and Population Decline in the Northeast. In Disease and Demography in the Americas, edited by J. H. Verano and D. H. Ubelaker, pp. 177185. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R. 1995 Microchronology and Demographic Evidence Relating to the Size of Pre-Columbian North American Indian Populations. Science 268:16011604.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R. 1996 Mohawk Demography and the Effects of Exogenous Epidemics on American Indian Populations. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 15:160182.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R., and Lanphear, Kim M. 1988 European Contact and Indian Depopulation in the Northeast: The Timing of the First Epidemics. Ethnohistory 35:1533.Google Scholar
Snow, Dean R., and Starna, William A. 1989 Sixteenth Century Depopulation: A View from the Mohawk Valley. American Anthropologist 91:142149.Google Scholar
Stannard, David E. 1992 American Holocaust: Columbus and the Conquest of the New World. Oxford University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Stevenson, Katherine P. 1994 Chronological and Settlement Aspects of the Valley View Site (47LC34). The Wisconsin Archeologist 75:237294.Google Scholar
Stevenson, Katherine, and Boszhardt, Robert F. 1993 The Current Status of Oneota Sites and Research in Western Wisconsin. Mississippi Valley Archaeology Center Report of Investigations No. 163. University of Wisconsin-La Crosse, La Crosse.Google Scholar
Steward, Julian H. 1949 The Native Population of South America. In The Comparative Ethnology of South American Indians, edited by Julian H. Steward, pp. 655668. Handbook of South American Indians, Vol. 5, Julian H. Steward, general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Stewart, R. Patrick, and Arzigian, Constance 1997 Phase III Mitigation of Archaeological Resources within the CSAH 4 Corridor (SAP 28–604-21) Near Yucatan, Houston County, Minnesota. Mississippi Valley Archaeology Center Report of Investigations No. 265. University of Wisconsin – La Crosse, La Crosse.Google Scholar
Stuiver, Minze, and Reamer, P. J. 1993 Extended 14C Database and Revised CALIB 3.014C Age Calibration Program. Radiocarbon 35:215230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Styles, Bonnie W., and White, Karli 1995 Analysis of Faunal Remains. In The Tremaine Site Complex: Oneota Occupation in the La Crosse Locality, Wisconsin. Volume 3: The Tremaine Site (47 Lc–95), by J. O’Gorman, pp. 197224. Museum Archaeology Program Archaeology Research Series No. 3. State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
Sumner, William M. 1989 Population and Settlement Area: An Example from Iran. American Anthropologist 91:631641.Google Scholar
Sundstrom, Linea 1997 Smallpox Used Them Up: References to Epidemic Disease in Northern Plains Winter Counts, 1714–1920. Ethnohistory 44:305343.Google Scholar
Tani, Masakazu 1994 Why Should More Pots Break in Larger Households? Mechanisms Underlying Population Estimates from Ceramics. In Kalinga Ethnoarchaeology: Expanding A rchaeological Method and Theory, edited by W. A. Longacre and J. M. Skibo, pp. 5170. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Tani, Masakazu, and Longacre, William A.. 1999 On Methods of Measuring Ceramic Uselife: A Revision of the Uselife Estimates of Cooking Vessels among the Kalinga, Philippines. American Antiquity 64:299308.Google Scholar
Telford, R. J., Heegaard, E., and Birks, H. J. B. 2004 The Intercept is a Poor Estimate of a Calibrated Radiocarbon Age. The Holocene 14:296298 Google Scholar
Theler, James 1989 The Pammel Creek Site Faunal Remains. The Wisconsin Archeologist 70:157241.Google Scholar
Thornton, Russell 1997 Aboriginal North American Population and Rates of Decline, ca. A.D. 1500–1900. Current Anthropology 38: 310315.Google Scholar
Tiffany, Joseph A., and Anderson, Duane 1993 The Milford Site (13DK1): A Postcontact Village in Northwest Iowa. Plains Anthropologist 38:283306.Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce G. 1976 The Children of Aataentsic: A History of the Huron People to 1660, Vol. 1. McGill-Queen’s University Press, Montreal.Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce G. 1981 Ontario Native People and the Epidemics of 1634 – 1640. In Indians, Animals, and the Fur Trade: A Critique of ‘Keepers of the Game’, edited by S. Krech III, pp. 2138. University of Georgia Press, Athens.Google Scholar
Trimble, Michael K. 1986 An Ethnohistorical Interpretation of the Spread of Smallpox in the Northern Plains Utilizing Concepts of Disease Ecology. Reprints in Anthropology Vol. 33. J and L Reprint Company, Lincoln, Nebraska.Google Scholar
Tucker, Sara J. (compiler) 1942 Atlas: Indian Villages of the Illinois Country. Illinois State Museum Scientific Papers, Vol. 2. Springfield.Google Scholar
Turner, Christy G., and Lofgren, Laurel 1966 Household Size of Prehistoric Western Pueblo. Southwestern Journal of Anthropology 22:117132.Google Scholar
Ubelaker, Douglas H. 1976 Prehistoric New World Population Size: Historical Review and Current Appraisal of North American Estimates. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 45:661666.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ubelaker, Douglas H. 1988 North American Indian Population Size, A. D. 1500 to 1985. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 77:289294.Google Scholar
Ubelaker, Douglas H. 1992 North American Indian Population Size: Changing Perspectives. In Disease and Demography in the Americas, edited by J. W. Verano and D. H. Ubelaker, pp. 1691766. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Upham, Steadman 1986 Smallpox and Climate in the American Southwest. American Anthropologist 88:115128.Google Scholar
Vradenburg, Joseph A. 1993 Analysis of Human Skeletal Remains. In The Tremaine Site Complex: Oneota Occupation in the La Crosse Locality, Wisconsin. Volume 1: The OT Site (47 Lc–262), by J. O’Gorman, pp. 141156. Museum Archaeology Program Archaeology Research Series No. 1. State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
Vradenburg, Joseph A. 1999 Skeletal Biology of Late-Prehistoric La Crosse-Region Oneota Populations. The Missouri Archaeologist 60:107164.Google Scholar
Ward, H. Trawick, and Stephen Davis, R. P. Jr. 1991 The Impact of Old World Diseases on the Native Inhabitants of the North Carolina Piedmont. Archaeology of Eastern North America 19:171181.Google Scholar
Ward, G. K., and Wilson, S. R. 1978 Procedures for Comparing and Combining Radiocarbon Age Determinations: A Critique. Archaeometry 20:1931.Google Scholar
Wedel, Mildred M. 1959 Oneota Sites on the Upper Iowa River. The Missouri Archaeologist 21:1181.Google Scholar
Wedel, Mildred M. 1976 Ethnohistory: Its Payoffs and Pitfalls for Iowa Archeologists. Journal of the Iowa Anthropological Society 23:144.Google Scholar
Wedel, Mildred M. 1981 The Ioway, Oto, and Omaha Indians in 1700. Journal of the Iowa Archeological Society 28:114.Google Scholar
Wedel, Mildred M. 1986 Peering at the Ioway Indians through the Mist of Time: 1650-circa 1700. Journal of the Iowa Anthropological Society 33:174.Google Scholar
Wesson, Cameron 2000 Review of Numbers from Nowhere: The American Indian Contact Population Debate, by David Henige. American Anthropologist 102:419420.Google Scholar
Whitman, William 1937 The Otoe. Columbia University Contributions to Anthropology Vol. 28. Columbia University Press, New York.Google Scholar
Wiessner, Polly 1974 A Functional Estimator of Population from Floor Area. American Antiquity 39:343350.Google Scholar
Wilford, Lloyd A., and Brink, John W. 1974 The Hogback Site. The Minnesota Archaeologist 33(1–2).Google Scholar
Withrow, Randall M. 1988 Archaeological Manifestations of the 17th Century loway in the Upper Mississippi River Valley. Paper Presented at the 46th Annual Plains Anthropological Conference, Wichita, Kansas.Google Scholar
Withrow Randall, M., Gallagher, James P., and Rodell, Roland 1991 Reassessing the Evidence for Orr Oneota Population Movements in the Upper Mississippi Valley. Paper presented at the Council for Minnesota Archaeology Spring Symposium, St. Paul, Minnesota.Google Scholar
Wood, W. Raymond 1980 Plains Trade in Prehistoric and Protohistoric Intertribal Relations. In Anthropology on the Great Plains, edited by W. R. Wood and M. Liberty, pp. 98109. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Wright, Gary A. 1967 Some Aspects of Early and Mid-Seventeenth Century Exchange Networks in the Western Great Lakes. Michigan Archeologist 13:181197.Google Scholar
Yelton, Jeffrey K. 1991 Protohistoric Oneota Pottery of the Missouri River Valley: A Functional Perspective. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri, Columbia.Google Scholar
Zubrow, Ezra 1990 The Depopulation of Native America. Antiquity 64:754765.Google Scholar