Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T21:53:25.676Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Palaeoindian–Archaic transition in North America: new evidence from Texas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

C. Britt Bousman
Affiliation:
Center for Archaeological Studies & Department of Anthropology, Southwest Texas State University, San Marcos TX 78666, USA
Michael B. Collins
Affiliation:
Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin, Austin TX 78712, USA
Paul Goldberg
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, Boston University, Boston MA 02215, USA
Thomas Stafford
Affiliation:
Stafford Laboratories, Inc., Boulder CO 80301, USA
Jan Guy
Affiliation:
Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin, Austin TX 78712, USA
Barry W. Baker
Affiliation:
US National Fish & Wildlife Forensics Laboratory & Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Southern Oregon University, Ashland OR 97520, USA
D. Gentry Steele
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Texas A&M University, College Station TX 77843, USA
Marvin Kay
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville AR 72701, USA
Anne Kerr
Affiliation:
Center of Big Bend Studies, Sul Ross State University, Alpine TX 79832, USA
Glen Fredlund
Affiliation:
Department of Geography, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee WI 53211, USA
Phil Dering
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Texas A&M University, College Station TX 77843, USA
Vance Holliday
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Arizona, Tucson AZ 85721, USA
Diane Wilson
Affiliation:
Geography/Anthropology Department, University of Southern Maine, Gorham MA 04104, USA
Wulf Gose
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin TX 78712, USA
Susan Dial
Affiliation:
Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin, Austin TX 78712, USA
Paul Takac
Affiliation:
Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, University of Texas at Austin, Austin TX 78712, USA
Robin Balinsky
Affiliation:
Department of Geology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin TX 78712, USA
Marilyn Masson
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, SUNY-Albany, Albany NY 12222, USA
Joseph F. Powell
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque NM 87131, USA

Abstract

The transition from Palaeoindian to Archaic societies in North America is often viewed as a linear progression over a brief but time-transgressive period. New evidence from the Wilson-Leonard site in Texas suggests social experimentation by Palaeoindians over a 2500-year period eventually resulted in Archaic societies. The process was neither short nor linear, and the evidence shows that different but contemporaneous lifeways existed in a variety of locales in the south-central US in the Early Holocene.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd. 2002

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

Adovasio, J.M., Donahue, I. & Stuckenrath, R.. 1990. The Meadowcroft Rocksheiter radiocarbon chronology 1975–1990, American Antiquity 55: 348–54.Google Scholar
Amick, D.S. (ed.). 1999. Folsom lithic technology, explorations in structure and variation. Ann Arbor (MI): International Monographs in Prehistory.Google Scholar
Anderson, D.G., O’steen, L.D. & Sassaman, K.E.. 1996. Environmental and chronological considerations, in Anderson, D.G. & Sassaman, K.E. (ed.): 315.Google Scholar
Anderson, D.G. & Sassaman, K.E. (ed.). 1996. The Paleoindian and early Archaic southeast. Tuscaloosa (AL): The University of Alabama Press.Google Scholar
Bement, L.C. 1999. Bison hunting at Cooper site, where lightning bolts drew thundering herds. Norman (OK): University of Oklahoma Press.Google Scholar
Blum, M.D., Toomey, R.S. III & Valastro, S. JR. 1994. Fluvial response to Late Quaternary climatic and environmental change, Edwards Plateau, Texas, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 108: 121.Google Scholar
Bouldurian, A.T. & Cotter, J.L.. 1999. Clovis revisited, new perspectives on Paleoindian adaptations from Blackwa-ter Draw, New Mexico. Philadelphia (PA): University of Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Bousman, C.B. 1998. Paleoenvironmental change in central Texas: the palynological evidence, Plains Anthropologist 43: 201–19.Google Scholar
Broyles, BJ. 1971. Second preliminary report: the St Albans site, Kanawha County, West Virginia. Charleston (VA): West Virginia Geological and Economic Survey. Report of Archaeological Investigations 3.Google Scholar
Collins, M.B. 1995. Forty years of archeology in Central Texas, Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society 66: 362400.Google Scholar
Collins, M.B. (Ed.). 1998. Wilson-Leonard, an 11,000-year archeological record of hunter-gatherers in central Texas I-V. Austin (TX): University of Texas.Google Scholar
Dibble, D.S. & Lorrain, D.. 1968. Bonfire Shelter: a stratified bison kill site, Val Verde County, Texas. Austin (TX): Texas Memorial Museum.Google Scholar
Dlllehay, T.D. 1974. Late Quaternary bison population changes on the Southern Plains, Plains Anthropologist 19:180–96.Google Scholar
Doran, G.H., Dickel, D.N. & Newson, L.. 1990. A 7,290-year-old bottle gourd from the Windover site, Florida, American Antiquity 55: 354–60.Google Scholar
Driskell, B.N. 1996. Stratified late Pleistocene and early Holocene deposits at Dust Cave, northwestern Alabama, in Anderson, & Sassaman, (ed.): 315–30.Google Scholar
Ferring, CR. 2001. The archaeology and paleoecology of the Aubrey Clovis site (41DN479), Denton County, Texas. Denton (TX): University of North Texas.Google Scholar
Fiedel, S.J. 1992. Prehistory of the Americas. 2nd edition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gose, W. 2000. Palaeomagnetic studies of burned rocks, Journal of Archaeological Science 27: 409–21.Google Scholar
Haury, E.W, Sayles, E.B. & Wasley, W.W.. 1959. The Lehner mammoth site, southeastern Arizona, American Antiquity 25: 230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haynes, C.V. & Hemmings, E.T.. 1968. Mammoth bone shaft wrench from Murray Springs, Arizona, Science 159:186–7.Google Scholar
Hofman, J.L., Todd, L.C., Schultz, C.B. & Hendy, W.. 1991. The Lipscomb Bison Quarry: continuing investigation at a Folsom kill-butchery site on the Southern Plains, Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society 60: 149–89.Google Scholar
Holliday, V.T., Haynes, C.V. JR., Hofman, J.L. & Meltzer, D.J.. 1994. Geoaxchaeology and geochronology of the Miami (Clovis) site, southern High Plains of Texas, Quaternary Research 41: 234–44.Google Scholar
Huckell, B.B. 1996. The Archaic prehistory of the North American southwest, Journal of World Prehistory 10: 305–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Irwin-Williams, C. 1979. Post-Pleistocene archaeology, 70002000 BC, in Ortiz, A. (ed.), Handbook of North American Indians Volume 9 Southwest: 31–42. Washington (DC): Smithsonian Institution.Google Scholar
Johnson, E. (ed.). 1987. Lubbock Lake: late Quaternary studies on the Southern High Plains. College Station (TX): Texas A&M University Press.Google Scholar
Johnson, L. JR. 1964. The Devil’s Mouth site: a stratified campsite at Amistad Reservoir, Val Verde County, Texas. Austin (TX): University of Texas.Google Scholar
Johnson, L. JR. 1987. Early Archaic life at the Sleeper archaeological site, 41BC65, of the Hill Country, Blanco County, Texas. Austin (TX): Texas State Department of Highways & Public Transportation.Google Scholar
Kay, M. (ed.). 1982. Holocene adaptations within the lower Pomme de Terre River valley, Missouri Volumes l-lll. Springfield (IL): Illinois State Museum Society.Google Scholar
Kerr, A.C. 2000. Systematic analysis of unfluted lanceolate projectile points. Unpublished MA thesis, University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Knudson, R., Johnson, E. & Holliday, V.T.. 1998. The 10,000-year-old Lubbock artifact assemblage, Plains Anthropologist 43: 239–56.Google Scholar
Krueger, H.W. & Sullivan, C.H.. 1984. Models for carbon isotope fractionation between diet and bone, in Turnland, J.R. & Johnson, P.E. (ed.), Stable isotopes and nutrition: 205–20. Washington (DC): American Chemical Society.Google Scholar
Lopinot, N.H., Ray, J.H. & Conner, M.D.. 2000. The 1999 excavations at the Big Eddy site (23CE426). Springfield (MO): Southwest Missouri State University.Google Scholar
Mallouf, R.J. & Mandel, R.D.. 1997. Horace Rivers: a late-Plainview component in the northeastern Texas panhandle, Current Research in the Pleistocene 14: 5052.Google Scholar
Mcdonald, J.N. 1984. The reordered North American selection regime and Late Quaternary megafaunal extinctions, in Martin, P.S. & Klein, K.G. (ed.), Quaternary extinctions, a prehistoric revolution: 403–39. Tucson (AZ): University of Arizona Press.Google Scholar
Meltzer, D.J. 1988. Late Pleistocene human adaptations in eastern North America, Journal of World Prehistory 2: 152.Google Scholar
Meltzer, D.J. 1989. Was stone exchanged among eastern North American Paleoindians? in Ellis, C.J. & Lothrop, J.C. (ed.), Eastern Paleoindian lithic resource use: 11–39. Boulder (CO): Westview Press.Google Scholar
Meltzer, D.J. & Smith, B.. 1986. Paleoindian and Early Archaic subsistence strategies in eastern North America, in Neusius, S.W. (ed.), Foraging, collecting, and harvesting: Archaic period subsistence and settlement in the eastern woodlands: 3–31. Carbondale (IL): Southern Illinois University at Carbondale.Google Scholar
Patterson, L.W. & Hudgins, J.. 1985. Paleo-Indian occupations in Wharton County, Texas, Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society 56: 155–70.Google Scholar
Perttula, T.K., Mcguff, P. & Ferring, CR.. 1994. Excavations at the Quince site (34AT134) Atoka County, Oklahoma, Volume V, Part 2. Denton (TX): University of North Texas. McGee Creek Archaeological Project Reports.Google Scholar
Powell, J.F. & Steele, D.G.. 1994. Diet and health of Paleoindians: an examination of early Holocene human dental remains, in Sobolik, K.D. (ed.), Paleonutrition: the diet and health of prehistoric Americans: 178–94. Carbondale (IL): Southern Illinois University.Google Scholar
Prewitt, E.R. 1985. From Circleville to Toyah: comments on Central Texas chronology, Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society 54: 201–38.Google Scholar
Redder, A.J. 1985. Horn Shelter Number 2: The south end, a preliminary report, Central Texas Archeologist 10: 3765.Google Scholar
Saunders, J.W, Mandel, R.D., Saucier, R.T., Allen, E.T., Hallmark, C.T., Johnson, J.K., Jackson, E.H., Allen, CM., Stringer, G.L., Frink, D.S., Feathers, J.K., Williams, S., Gremillion, K.J., Vidrine, M.F. & Jones, R.. 1997. A mound complex in Louisiana at 5400-5000 years before the present, Science 277: 1796–9.Google Scholar
Sellaros, E.H., Campbell, T.N. & Evans, G.L.. 1940. Pleistocene artifacts and associated fossils from Bee County, Texas, Bulletin of the Geological Society of America 51: 162758.Google Scholar
Sellaros, E.H., Evans, G.L., Meade, G.E. & Krieger, A.. 1947. Fossil bison and associated artifacts from Plainview, Texas, Bulletin of the Geological Society of America 58: 927–54.Google Scholar
Sorrow, W.M. 1968. The Devil’s Mouth site: the third season – 1967. Austin (TX): The University of Texas at Austin.Google Scholar
Steele, D.G. & Powell, J.F.. 1992. Peopling of the Americas: paleobiological evidence, Human Biology 64(3): 303–36.Google ScholarPubMed
Stuiver, M., Reimer, P.J., Bard, E., Beck, J.W., Burr, G.S., Hughen, K.A., Kromer, B., Mccormac, EG., Plicht, J. & Spurk, M.. 1998. INTCAL98 radiocarbon age calibration 24,000-0 cal bp, Radiocarbon 40: 1041–83.Google Scholar
Toomey, R.S III, Blum, M.D. & Valastro, S. JR. 1993. Late Quaternary climates and environments of the Edwards Plateau, Texas, Global and Planetary Change 7: 299320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vierra, B.J. (ed.). 1994. Archaic hunter-gatherer archaeology in the American Southwest. Portales (NM): Eastern New Mexico University.Google Scholar
Wendorf, F., Krieger, A.D., Albritton, C.C. & Stewart, T.D.. 1955. The Midland discovery: A report on the Pleistocene human remains from Midland, Texas. Austin (TX): University of Texas Press.Google Scholar
Willey, G.R. & Phillips, P.. 1958. Method and theory in American archaeology. Chicago (IL): University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Wood, W.R. & Mcmillan, R.B. (ed.). 1976. Prehistoric man and his environments: a case study in the Ozark Highland. New York (NY): Academic Press.Google Scholar
Wyckoff, D.G. 1985. The Packard Complex: Early Archaic, pre-Dalton occupations on the prairie-woodlands border, Southeastern Archaeology 4: 126.Google Scholar
Young, D. 1988. The double burial at Horn Shelter: an osteo-logical analysis, Central Texas Archeologist 11: 11115.Google Scholar