Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T01:08:21.810Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Hunter-Gatherer Mobility and Versatility: A Consideration of Long-Term Lithic Supply in the Midwest

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 September 2019

Mark F. Seeman*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Kent State University, PO Box 5190, Kent, OH44242-0001, USA
Amanda N. Colucci
Affiliation:
College of Architecture and Environmental Design, Kent State University, PO Box 5190, Kent, OH44242-0001, USA
Charles Fulk
Affiliation:
1148 US Highway 250 N., Ashland, OH44805, USA
*
([email protected], corresponding author)

Abstract

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 few general conceptions as to when and how this took place. Here we examine the fit of gradual, one-way social change as it relates to the size and shape of lithic supply zones for Upper Mercer and Flint Ridge flint as well as the inflow of exotic materials. Our results show no singular cline either in the size of successive lithic supply zones or in the inflow of exotic materials. Hunter-gatherer societies can make remarkable behavioral changes through time and not necessarily in any consistent (unilineal) direction. Such differences impose more contingency—and less directionality—into particular historical sequences.

Las sociedades cazadoras recolectoras dominaron la parte del Medio Oeste de Norte América por al menos once mil años. Al final de este periodo aquellas sociedades fueron más complejas, tuvieron menor movilidad y tuvieron una mayor densidad de población que al inicio, sin embargo en realidad existen pocas propuestas sobre cuándo y cómo es que esto tuvo lugar. Aquí examinaremos el ajuste gradual y unidireccional del cambio social en relación con el tamaño y la forma de los yacimientos líticos de pedernal de Upper Mercer y Flint Ridge, así como la entrada de bienes exóticos. Nuestros resultados no muestran un cambio singular ni en el tamaño de los yacimientos líticos ni en la entrada de bienes exóticos. Las sociedades de cazadores recolectores pueden presentar cambios notables en su comportamiento a través del tiempo y no necesariamente en una sola dirección (unilineal). Tales diferencias imponen más contingencias - y menos direccionalidad – en secuencias históricas particulares.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2019 by the Society for American Archaeology

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

Amick, Daniel S. 2017 Evolving Views on the Pleistocene Colonization of North America. Quaternary International 431:125151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bailey, Geoff 2007 Time Perspectives, Palimpsests, and the Archaeology of Time. Journal of Archaeological Archaeology 26:198223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bamforth, Douglas B. 2009 Projectile Points, People, and Plains Paleoindian Perambulations. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 28:142157.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benn, David W., and Thompson, Joe B. 2009 Archaic Periods in Eastern Iowa. In Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the Midcontinent, edited by Emerson, Thomas E., McElrath, Dale L., and Fortier, Andrew C., pp. 491561. State University of New York Press, Albany.Google Scholar
Binford, Lewis R. 1968 Post–Pleistocene Adaptations. In New Perspectives in Archeology, edited by Binford, Sally R. and Binford, Lewis R., pp. 313341. Aldine, Chicago.Google Scholar
Binford, Lewis R. 1980 Willow Smoke and Dogs Tails: Hunter-Gatherer Settlement Systems and Archaeological Site Formation. American Antiquity 45:420.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Binford, Lewis R. 2001 Constructing Frames of Reference. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Biró, Katalin T. 2009 Sourcing Raw Materials for Chipped Stone Artifacts: The State-of-the-Art in Hungary and the Carpathian Basin. In Lithic Materials and Paleolithic Societies, edited by Adams, Brian and Blades, Brooke S., pp. 4753. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester, UK.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, James A. 1985 Long-Term Trends to Sedentism and the Emergence of Complexity in the American Midwest. In Prehistoric Hunter-Gatherers: The Emergence of Cultural Complexity, edited by Price, T. Douglas and Brown, James A., pp. 201231. Academic Press, San Diego.Google Scholar
Broyles, Bettye J. 1971 Second Preliminary Report: The St. Albans Site, Kanawha County, West Virginia. Report of Archeological Investigations No. 3. West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey, Morgantown.Google Scholar
Buchanan, Briggs, Hamilton, Marcus J., David Kilby, J., and Gingerich, Joseph A. M. 2016 Lithic Networks Reveal Early Regionalization in Late Pleistocene North America. Journal of Archaeological Science 65:114121.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burke, Adrian 2006 Paleoindian Ranges in Northeastern North America Based on Lithic Raw Materials Sourcing. In Notions de territoire et de mobilité: Exemples de l'Europe et des premières nations en Amérique du Nord avant le contact européen, edited by Bressy, Céline, Burke, Ariane, Chalard, Pierre, and Martin, Hélène, pp. 114. Actes de Sessions Présentées au Xe Congrès Annuel de l'Association Européenne des Archéologues (EAA), Lyon, September 8–11, 2004. Université de Liège, Belgium. Electronic document, https://www.nh.gov/nhdhr/documents/08burke.pdf, accessed August 1, 2018.Google Scholar
Cantin, Mark E. 2000 Comparative Analysis of Thebes and Kirk Lithic Technology and Home Range Implications in Southwestern Indiana. Master's thesis, Department of Geography, Geology, and Anthropology, Indiana State University, Terre Haute.Google Scholar
Carlson, David L. 2003 Figuring Out “What Happened in the Middle Archaic?” In Theory, Method, and Practice in Modern Archaeology, edited by Jeske, Robert J. and Charles, Douglas K., pp. 6887. Praeger, Westport, Connecticut.Google Scholar
Carr, Dillon H. 2017 A Landscape Approach to Reconstructing Territorial Mobility during the Parkhill Phase in Southern Michigan and Ontario. PaleoAmerica 3:364373. DOI: 10.1080/20555563.2017.1379824.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carr, Dillon H., and Boszhardt, Robert 2010 Organization of Lithic Procurement at Silver Mound, Wisconsin: Source of Hixton Silicified Sandstone. In Ancient Mines and Quarries: A Trans-Atlantic Perspective, edited by Brewer-LaPorta, Margaret, Burke, Adrian, and Field, David, pp. 132141. Oxbow Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Carlson, Ernest H. 1991 Minerals of Ohio. Division of Geological Survey Bulletin 69. Ohio Department of Natural Resources, Columbus.Google Scholar
Carskadden, Jeff 2004 Some Observations on Early Paleoindian Chert Acquisition and Site Distribution in Muskingum County, Ohio. West Virginia Archeologist 56:127.Google Scholar
Clarkson, Chris, and Bellas, Angelo 2014 Mapping Stone: Using GIS Spatial Modeling to Predict Lithic Source Zones. Journal of Archaeological Science 46:324333.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coe, Joffre L. 1964 The Formative Cultures of the Carolina Piedmont. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society New Series Vol. 54(5). American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collard, Mark, Buchanan, Briggs, O'Brien, Michael J., and Scolnick, Jonathan 2013 Risk, Mobility, or Population Size? Drivers of Technological Richness among Contact-Period Western North American Hunter-Gatherers. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 368:19. Electronic document, https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/full/10.1098/rstb.2012.0412, accessed February 20, 2019.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Colucci, Amanda N. 2017 Visualizing Paleoindian and Archaic Mobility in the Ohio Region of Eastern North America. PhD dissertation, Department of Geography, Kent State University, Kent, Ohio.Google Scholar
Cook, Thomas G. 1980 The Cultural Use of Chert in the Patoka Lake Region. In Archaeological Salvage Excavations at Patoka Lake, Indiana: Prehistoric Occupations of the Upper Patoka River Valley, edited by Munson, Cheryl A., pp. 608644. Research Reports No. 6. Glenn A. Black Laboratory of Archaeology, Indiana University, Bloomington.Google Scholar
Daniel, I. Randolph Jr. 2001 Stone Raw Material Availability and Early Archaic Settlement in the Southeastern United States. American Antiquity 66:237265.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delcourt, Paul A., and Delcourt, Hazel R. 2004 Prehistoric Native Americans and Ecological Change: Human Ecosystems in Eastern North America since the Pleistocene. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Deller, D. Brian 1989 Interpretation of Chert Type Variation in Paleoindian Industries, Southwestern Ontario. In Eastern Paleoindian Lithic Resource Use, edited by Ellis, Christopher J. and Lothrop, Johnathan C., pp. 191220. Westview Press, Boulder, Colorado.Google Scholar
Ellis, Christopher J. 2011 Measuring Paleoindian Range Mobility and Land Use in the Great Lakes/Northeast. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 30:385401.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ellis, Christopher J., Carr, Dillon H., and Loebel, Thomas J. 2011 The Younger Dryas and Late Pleistocene Peoples of the Great Lakes Region. Quaternary International 242:534545.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ellis, Christopher J., Timmins, Peter A., and Martelle, Holly 2009 At the Crossroads and Periphery: The Archaic Archaeological Record of Southern Ontario. In Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the Midcontinent, edited by Emerson, Thomas E., McElrath, Dale L., and Fortier, Andrew C., pp 787–837. State University of New York Press, Albany.Google Scholar
Emerson, Thomas E., and McElrath, Dale L. 2009 The Eastern Woodlands Archaic and the Tyranny of Theory. In Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the Midcontinent, edited by Emerson, Thomas E., McElrath, Dale L., and Fortier, Andrew C., pp. 2338. State University of New York Press, Albany.Google Scholar
Emerson, Thomas E., McElrath, Dale L., and Williams, Joyce A. 1986 Patterns of Hunter-Gatherer Mobility and Sedentism during the Archaic Period in the American Bottom. In Foraging, Collecting, and Harvesting: Archaic Period Subsistence and Settlement in the Eastern Woodlands, edited by Neusius, Sarah W., pp. 247273. Occasional Paper No. 6. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Eren, Metin I., Redmond, Brian G., Miller, G. Logan, Buchanan, Briggs, Boulanger, Matthew T., Morgan, Brooke M., and O'Brien, Michael J. 2018 Paleo Crossing (33ME274): A Clovis Site in Northeastern Ohio. In In the Eastern Fluted Point Tradition, Volume II, edited by Gingerich, Joseph A. M., pp. 187210. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Flannery, Kent V. 1976 Empirical Determination of Site Catchments in Oaxaca and Tehuacán. In The Early Mesoamerican Village, edited by Flannery, Kent V., pp. 103117. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Fogelman, Gary L., and Lantz, Stanley W. 2006 The Pennsylvania Fluted Point Survey. Fogelman Publishing Company, Turbotville, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Fowke, Gerard 1902 Archaeological History of Ohio: The Mound Builders and Later Indians. Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society, Columbus.Google Scholar
Gardner, William M. 1983 Stop Me If You've Heard This One Before: The Flint Run Paleoindian Complex Revisited. Archaeology of Eastern North America 11:4964.Google Scholar
Gramly, Richard Michael 1988 Palaeo-Indian Sites South of Lake Ontario, Western and Central New York State. In Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene Paleoecology and Archaeology of the Eastern Great Lakes, edited by Laub, Richard S., Miller, Norton G., and Steadman, David W., pp. 265280. Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences Vol. 33. Buffalo, New York.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Marcus J., Lobo, José, Rupley, Eric, Youn, Hyejin, and West, Geoffrey B. 2016 The Ecological and Evolutionary Energetics of Hunter-Gatherer Residential Mobility. Evolutionary Anthropology 25:124132.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Helms, Mary W. 1988 Ulysses’ Sail: An Ethnographic Odyssey of Power, Knowledge, and Geographic Distance. Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hodder, Ian 1982 Symbols in Action. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Hodder, Ian, and Orton, Clive 1976 Spatial Analysis in Archaeology. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Holcombe, Troy L., Taylor, Lisa A., Reid, David F., Warren, John S., Vincent, Peter A., and Herdendorf, Charles E. 2003 Revised Lake Erie Postglacial Lake Level History Based on New Detailed Bathymetry. Journal of Great Lakes Research 29:681704.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holen, Steven R. 1991 Bison Hunting Territories and Lithic Acquisition among the Pawnee: An Ethnohistoric and Archaeological Study. In Raw Material Economies among Prehistoric Hunter-Gatherers, edited by Montet-White, Anta and Holen, Steven, pp. 399411. Publications in Anthropology No. 19. University of Kansas, Lawrence.Google Scholar
Holen, Steven R. 2001 Clovis Mobility and Lithic Procurement on the Central Great Plains of North America. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Nebraska, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Holsten, Jeffery N., and Cochran, Donald R. 1986 Paleo-Indian and Early Archaic in the Upper Wabash Drainage. Archaeological Resources Management Service Reports of Investigation 19. Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana.Google Scholar
Irimoto, Takashi 1981 Chipewyan Ecology: Group Structure and Caribou Hunting System. Senri Ethnological Series No. 8. National Museum of Ethnology, Osaka, Japan.Google Scholar
Ives, John W. 1998 Developmental Processes in the Pre-Contact History of Athapaskan, Algonquian, and Numic Kin Systems. In Transformations of Kinship, edited by Godelier, Maurice, Trautmann, Thomas R., and Tjon Sie Fat, Franklin E., pp. 94139. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Jefferies, Richard W. 2004 Regional Scale Interaction Networks and the Emergence of Cultural Complexity along the Northern Margins of the Southeast. In Signs of Power: The Rise of Cultural Complexity in the Southeast, edited by Gibson, Jon L. and Carr, Philip J., pp. 7185. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Jones, George T., Back, Charlotte, Jones, Eric E., and Hughes, Richard E. 2003 Lithic Source Use and Paleoarchaic Foraging Territories in the Great Basin. American Antiquity 68:538.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, George T., Fontes, Lisa M., Horowitz, Rachel A., Beck, Charlotte, and Bailey, David G. 2012 Reconsidering Paleoarchaic Mobility in the Central Great Basin. American Antiquity 77:351367.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jordan, Peter 2008 Hunters and Gatherers. In Handbook of Archaeological Theories, edited by Bentley, R. Alexander, Maschner, Herbert D. G., and Chippendale, Christopher, pp. 447465. AltaMira Press, Lanham, Maryland.Google Scholar
Justice, Noel D. 1987 Stone Age Spear and Arrow Points of the Midcontinental and Eastern United States. Indiana University Press, Bloomington.Google Scholar
Kelly, Robert L. 1988 The Three Sides of a Biface. American Antiquity 53:717734.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kelly, Robert L. 1995 The Foraging Spectrum: Diversity in Hunter-Gatherer Lifeways. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Koldehoff, Brad, and Loebel, Thomas J. 2009 Clovis and Dalton: Unbounded and Bounded Systems in the Midcontinent of North America. In Lithic Material and Paleolithic Societies, edited by Adams, Brian and Blades, Brooke S., pp. 270287. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester, UK.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Larsen, Curtis E. 1999 A Century of Great Lakes Levels Research: Finished or Just Beginning? In Retrieving Michigan's Buried Past: The Archaeology of the Great Lakes State, edited by Halsey, John R., pp. 130. Bulletin 64. Cranbrook Institute of Science, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.Google Scholar
Lévi-Strauss, Claude 1963 Totemism. Beacon Press, Boston.Google Scholar
Lévi-Strauss, Claude 1966 The Savage Mind. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Li, Yong-Xiang, Yu, Zicheng, and Kodama, Kenneth P. 2007 Sensitive Moisture Response to Holocene Millennial-Scale Climate Variations in the Mid-Atlantic Region, USA. Holocene 17:38.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lucas, Gavin 2005 The Archaeology of Time. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Luedtke, Barbara E. 1992 An Archaeologist's Guide to Chert and Flint. Archaeological Research Tools 7. Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
McCoy, Mark D., Ladefoged, Thegn N., Blanshard, Andrew, and Jorgensen, Alex 2010 Reconstructing Lithic Supply Zones and Procurement Areas: An Example from the Bay of Islands, Northland, New Zealand. Journal of Pacific Archaeology 1:174183.Google Scholar
McElrath, Dale L., and Emerson, Thomas E. 2009 Concluding Thoughts on the Archaic Occupation of the Eastern Woodlands. In Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the Midcontinent, edited by Emerson, Thomas E., McElrath, Dale L., and Fortier, Andrew C. pp. 841855. State University of New York Press, Albany.Google Scholar
McElrath, Dale L., Fortier, Andrew C., Koldehoff, Brad, and Emerson, Thomas E. 2009 The American Bottom: An Archaic Cultural Crossroads. In Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the Midcontinent, edited by Emerson, Thomas E., McElrath, Dale L., and Fortier, Andrew C., pp. 317375. State University of New York Press, Albany.Google Scholar
Morrow, Juliet E. 2014 Early Paleoindian Mobility and Watercraft: An Assessment from the Mississippi River Valley. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 39:103129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Munson, Patrick J., and Munson, Cheryl A. 1984 Cherts and Archaic Chert Utilization in South-Central Indiana. In Prehistoric Chert Exploitation: Studies from the Midcontinent, edited by Butler, Brian M. and May, Ernest E., pp. 149166. Occasional Paper No. 2. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Nolan, David J., and Fishel, Richard L. 2009 Archaic Cultural Variation and Lifeways in West-Central Illinois. In Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the Midcontinent, edited by Emerson, Thomas E., McElrath, Dale L., and Fortier, Andrew C., pp. 401490. State University of New York Press, Albany.Google Scholar
Preucel, Robert W., and Mrozowksi, Stephen A. 2010 Part III: Agency, Meaning, and Practice. In Contemporary Archaeology in Theory: The New Pragmatism, 2nd ed., edited by Preucel, Robert W. and Mrozowski, Stephen A., pp. 131136. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester, UK.Google Scholar
Prufer, Olaf H. 1960 Survey of Ohio Fluted Points, Numbers 1 and 3. Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cleveland, Ohio.Google Scholar
Prufer, Olaf H. 1961 Survey of Ohio Fluted Points, Number 4. Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cleveland, Ohio.Google Scholar
Prufer, Olaf H. 1962 Survey of Ohio Fluted Points, Numbers 7 and 8. Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cleveland, Ohio.Google Scholar
Prufer, Olaf H. 1963 Survey of Ohio Fluted Points, Number 9. Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cleveland, Ohio.Google Scholar
Prufer, Olaf H. 1964 Survey of Ohio Fluted Points, Number 10. Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cleveland, Ohio.Google Scholar
Purtill, Matthew P. 2009 The Ohio Archaic: A Review. In Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the Midcontinent, edited by Emerson, Thomas E., McElrath, Dale L., and Fortier, Andrew C., pp. 565606. State University of New York Press, Albany.Google Scholar
Purtill, Matthew P. 2012 A Persistent Place: A Landscape Approach to the Prehistoric Archaeology of the Greenlee Tract in Southern Ohio. Lulu Press, Raleigh, North Carolina.Google Scholar
Ritchie, William A. 1965 The Archaeology of New York State. Natural History Press, Garden City, New York.Google Scholar
Robinson, Ryan W., Johnson, William C., Cummings, Bryan C., Bastianini, Denise G., and Siemon, Edward J. III 2010 Archaeological Investigations at the West Blennerhassett Site (46WD83-A) Wood County, West Virginia. Appalachian Corridor D Archaeological Reports. Michael Baker Jr. Inc., Moon Township, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Rogers, Randal L. Jr. 1990 Late Quaternary Stratigraphy and Geologic History of the Upper Ohio River Valley, near Gallipolis Locks and Dam. Master's thesis, Department of Geology and Geography, University of West Virginia, Morgantown.Google Scholar
Sassaman, Kenneth E. 2010 The Eastern Archaic, Historicized. AltaMira Press, Lanham, Maryland.Google Scholar
Sassaman, Kenneth E., and Randall, Asa R. 2012 Hunter-Gatherer Theory in North American Archaeology. In The Oxford Handbook of North American Archaeology, edited by Pauketat, Timothy R., pp. 1827. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Seeman, Mark F. 1994 Intercluster Lithic Patterning at Nobles Pond: A Case for “Disembedded” Procurement among Early Paleoindian Societies. American Antiquity 59:273288.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seeman, Mark F., Nilsson, Nils E., Summers, Garry L., Morris, Larry L., Barans, Paul J., Dowd, Elaine, and Newman, Margaret E. 2008 Evaluating Protein Residues on Gainey Phase Paleoindian Stone Tools. Journal of Archeological Science 35:27422750.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seeman, Mark F., Summers, Garry L., Nilsson, Nils E., and Barans, Paul J. 2018 A Description of Fluted Points from Nobles Pond (33ST357), a Paleoindian Site in Northeastern Ohio. In In the Eastern Fluted Point Tradition, Vol. 2, edited by Gingerich, Joseph A. M., pp. 379405. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Shane, Linda C. K., Snyder, Gordon G., and Anderson, Katherine H. 2001 Holocene Vegetation and Climate Changes in the Ohio Region. In Archaic Transitions in Ohio and Kentucky Prehistory, edited by Prufer, Olaf H., Pedde, Sara E., and Meindl, Richard S., pp. 1155. Kent State University Press, Kent, Ohio.Google Scholar
Shields, Rob 1999 Lefebvre, Love, and Struggle: Spatial Dialectics. Rutledge, New York.Google Scholar
Smith, Edward E. Jr. 1990 Paleoindian Economy and Settlement Patterns in the Wyandotte Chert Source Area, Unglaciated South-Central Indiana. In Early Paleoindian Economies of Eastern North America, edited by Tankersley, Kenneth B. and Isaac, Barry L., pp. 217258. Research in Economic Anthropology Supplement 5. JAI Press, Greenwich, Connecticut.Google Scholar
Smith, Geoffrey M. 2010 Footprints across the Black Rock: Temporal Variability in Prehistoric Foraging Territories and Toolstone Procurement Strategies in the Western Great Basin. American Antiquity 75:865885.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soto, María 2016 Procurement and Mobility during the Late Pleistocene: Characterizing the Stone-Tool Assemblage of the Picamoixons Site (Tarragona, NE Iberian Peninsula). Journal of Lithic Studies 3(2):125. Electronic document, http://journals.ed.ac.uk/lithicstudies/article/view/1782/2356, accessed August 1, 2018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stafford, C. Russell, and Cantin, Mark 2009 Archaic Period Chronology in the Hill County of Southern Indiana. In Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the Midcontinent, edited by Emerson, Thomas E., McElrath, Dale L., and Fortier, Andrew C., pp. 287313. State University of New York Press, Albany.Google Scholar
Stafford, C. Russell, Richards, Ronald L., and Anslinger, C. Michael 2000 The Bluegrass Fauna and Changes in Middle Holocene Hunter-Gatherer Foraging in the Southern Midwest. American Antiquity 65:317336.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stothers, David M., Abel, Timothy J., and Schneider, Andrew M. 2001 Archaic Perspectives in the Western Lake Erie Basin. In Archaic Transitions in Ohio and Kentucky Prehistory, edited by Prufer, Olaf H., Pedde, Sara E., and Meindl, Richard S., pp. 233289. Kent State University Press, Kent, Ohio.Google Scholar
Surovell, Todd A., Boyd, Joshua R., Vance Hanes, C. Jr., and Hodgins, Gregory W. L. 2016 On the Dating of the Folsom Complex and Its Correlation with the Younger Dryas, the End of Clovis, and Megafaunal Extinction. PaleoAmerica 2:8189. DOI:10.1080/20555563.2016.1174559.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tankersley, Kenneth B. 1989 Late Pleistocene Lithic Exploitation and Human Settlement in the Midwestern United States. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Indiana University, Bloomington.Google Scholar
Tankersley, Kenneth B. 1990 Late Pleistocene Lithic Exploitation in the Midwest and Midsouth: Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky. In Early Paleoindian Economies of Eastern North America, edited by Tankersley, Kenneth B. and Isaac, Barry L., pp. 259299. Research in Economic Anthropology Supplement 5. JAI Press, Greenwich, Connecticut.Google Scholar
Tankersley, Kenneth B. 1994 Was Clovis a Colonizing Population in Eastern North America? In The First Discovery of America: Archaeological Evidence of the Early Inhabitants of the Ohio Area, edited by Dancey, William S., pp. 95116. Ohio Archaeological Council, Columbus.Google Scholar
Thompson, Victor D. 2011 Review of The Eastern Archaic Historicized. Southeastern Archaeology 30:413414.Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce G. 1989 A History of Archaeological Thought. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
United States Census Bureau 2018 Migration/Geographic Mobility: Calculating Migration Expectancy Using ACS Data. Electronic document, https://www.census.gov/topics/population/migration/guidance/calculating-migration-expectancy.html, accessed May 13, 2019.Google Scholar
Vaesen, Krist, Collard, Mark, Cosgrove, Richard, and Roebroeks, Wil 2016 Population Size Does Not Explain Past Changes in Cultural Complexity. PNAS 113:E2241E2247. Electronic document, https://www.pnas.org/content/113/16/E2241, accessed February 3, 2019.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
White, Andrew A. 2012 The Social Networks of Early Hunter-Gatherers in Midcontinental North America. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
White, Andrew A. 2014 Changing Scales of Lithic Raw Material Transport among Early Hunter-Gatherers in Midcontinental North America. Archaeology of Eastern North America 42:5175.Google Scholar
Wilson, Lucy 2007 Understanding Prehistoric Lithic Raw Material Selection: Application of a Gravity Model. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 14:388411.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yu, Zicheng 2000 Ecosystem Response to Lateglacial and Early Holocene Climate Oscillations in the Great Lakes Region of North America. Quaternary Science Reviews 19:17231747.CrossRefGoogle Scholar