1st Edition

Eastern Paleoindian Lithic Resource Use

By Christopher Ellis Copyright 1990
    422 Pages
    by Routledge

    422 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1989, Eastern Paleoindian Lithic Resource Use is a series of papers that examine Paleoindian lifeways from various viewpoints, all of which have their foundations in stone and examining artifacts. Exploring the link between lithic materials (especially cryptocrystallines and chert), and Paleoindian mobility and looking at the transport of stone, seasonal resource availability, stone caches, use as social markers and land movement patterns and its surrounding data.

    1. A Hypothesis for the Use of Cryptocrystalline Raw Materials Among Paleoindian Groups of North America 2. Was Stone Exchanged Among Eastern North American Paleoindians ? 3. Ecological Implications for Paleoindian Lithic Procurement Economy in New England 4. Paleoindian Lithic Distribution in the New England-Maritimes Region 5. The Organization of Paleoindian Lithic Technology at the Potts Site 6. The Explanation of North-eastern Paieoindian Lithic Procurement Patterns 7. The Geological Age and Occurrence of Fossil Hill Formation Chert: Implications for Early Paleoindian Settlement Patterns 8. Interpretation of Chert Type Variation in Paleoindian Industries, Southwestern Ontario 9. Technological Organization in Great Lakes Paleoindian Assemblages 10. Lithic Resource Procurement and Early Paleoindian Land Use Patterns in the Appalachian Plateau of Ohio 11. A Close Look at the Big Picture: Early Palcoindian Lithic Resource Procurement in the Midwestern United States 12. Aspects of Late Paleoindian Lithic Technological Organization in the North western Lake Superior Region of Canada 13. Paleoindian in the Southeast: The View from Harney Flats 14. Late Glacial Foragers in Eastern North America

    Biography

    Christopher Ellis, Jonathan C Lothrop