Trends and traditions in southeastern zooarchaeology / edited by Tanya M. Peres.
This volume is a synthesis of zooarchaeology's history in the southeast, exploring the role of animals in social and economic development and examining the current trends and methodologies used.
Saved in:
Other Authors: | |
---|---|
Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Gainesville :
University Press of Florida,
[2014]
|
Series: | Ripley P. Bullen series.
|
Subjects: |
Table of Contents:
- Introduction / Tanya M. Peres
- "Som times I git a nuff and som times I don't": Confederate subsistence and the evidence from the Florence Stockade (38FL2), Florence, South Carolina / Judith A. Sichler
- Foodways, economic status, and the Antebellum Upland South cultural tradition in Central Kentucky / Tanya M. Peres
- Shell trade: craft production at a fourteenth-century Mississippian frontier / Maureen S. Meyers
- The dogs of Spirit Hill: an analysis of domestic dog burials from Jackson County, Alabama / Renee B. Walker and R. Jeannine Windham
- Hunting ritual, trapping meaning, gathering offerings / Cheryl Claassen
- Embedded: five thousand years of shell symbolism in the southeast / Aaron Deter-Wolf and Tanya M. Peres
- Behavioral, environmental, and applied aspects of molluscan assemblages from the Lower Tombigbee River, Alabama / Evan Peacock, Stuart W. McGregor, and Ashley A. Dumas.