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ref:
2003/1 (1)
Food
sharing past and present: archaeological
evidence for economic and social interactions
James G Enloe
Department of Anthropology, University of Iowa, Iowa
City, IA 52242 USA
james-enloe@uiowa.edu
Keywords:
food sharing, hunter/gatherers, Palaeolithic, faunal
analysis, refitting
Abstract
Food
sharing has been proposed as a fundamental basis for
the evolution of human behaviour, and a universal characteristic
of modern hunters and gatherers. Various theoretical
models contrast immediate vs delayed consumption, or
sharing vs storage, with the inference that these may
be seen as mutually exclusive phenomena. A survey of
cross-cultural evidence for sharing in the ethnographic
literature indicates quite a range of variation in actual
practice of food sharing among modern hunters and gatherers.
While competing theories attribute this behaviour to
ideological or ecological bases, most ideological models
are very difficult to test in the archaeological record.
The difficulty lies first in establishing that food
sharing took place, as opposed to mere assertion that
it did, and second in demonstrating linkages between
perceived patterns in the archaeological record and
explanatory models said to account for the practice.
Faunal remains from a late Upper Palaeolithic archaeological
site are used to examine food sharing. The spatial patterning
of the distribution of portions of individual reindeer
carcasses from level IV-20 of Pincevent indicates aspects
of food sharing in stages of multi-tiered distribution.
These results are compared with those from other methods
for investigating food sharing in prehistory. Indices
based on minimum numbers of individuals from the individual
household locations at Pincevent are shown to underrepresent
severely the food sharing interactions that are indicated
by carcass refitting. Carcass refitting is suggested
as an appropriate and feasible method for investigating
food sharing on other archaeological sites.
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ref:
2003/1 (2)
Stone
Age hunterfishergatherers at Zvejnieki,
northern Latvia: radiocarbon,
stable isotope and archaeozoology data
Gunilla Eriksson
Archaeological Research Laboratory, Stockholm University,
Greens villa, SE-10691 Stockholm, Sweden
gerik@arklab.su.se
Lembi
Lõugas
Institute of History, Rüütli 6, EE10130 Tallinn,
Estonia
lembi14@mail.ee
Ilga
Zagorska
Institute of Latvian History, Department of Archaeology,
Akademijas laukums 1, Riga LV 1050, Latvia
arnis@hq.vsaa.lv
Keywords:
Latvia, burials, Mesolithic, Neolithic, palaeodiet,
stable isotopes, archaeozoology, AMS radiocarbon dating
Abstract
The
Zvejnieki Stone Age1 complex in northern Latvia includes
one of the most significant hunterfishergatherer
cemeteries in northern Europe in terms of both the exceptional
number of individuals buried there and the extremely
long period of use: more than 300 individuals interred
over a period of at least four millennia. New results
of archaeozoological studies and palaeodiet investigations
performed on the Zvejnieki human remains are presented
here, together with 18 new radiocarbon dates. It is
clear from the stable isotope analyses that the Zvejnieki
people were heavily reliant on freshwater fish until
the end of the Early Neolithic, when the consumption
of fish declined somewhat, although it still made an
important contribution to the diet. The Late Neolithic
individuals in Corded Ware flexed burials at Zvejnieki
and elsewhere in Latvia show a distinct dietary pattern,
pointing towards animal husbandry. The faunal remains
found in settlement layers confirm the trends revealed
by bone chemistry, whereas the archaeozoological analyses
of faunal remains in graves, mostly in the form of tooth
pendants, show a different picture, emphasising the
importance of big game hunting. This illustrates the
discrepancy between the symbolic world, as expressed
by burial customs, and everyday life, as revealed by
stable isotope data and refuse layers.
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ref:
2003/1 (3)
Inland
foragers and the adoption of maize agriculture in the
upper Great Lakes of North America
John M OShea
Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann
Arbor, Michigan 48109-1079, USA
joshea@umich.edu
Keywords:
Great Lakes, earthwork, farmer-forager, Michigan, ritual
Abstract
This
paper considers the late prehistoric adoption of maize
agriculture by coastal groups in the upper Great Lakes
of North America. The goal is to investigate the social
and economic consequences on inland hunter-gatherers
that do not adopt agriculture. In addition to the expected
restructuring of seasonal and geographical exploitation
patterns, the inland groups develop a new regional aggregation
ritual that fosters exchange and alliances with the
coastal farmers. The central focus of this new social
institution is a series of large circular earthworks
that, in combination with ephemeral structures, burial
mounds and clusters of cache pits, form a complex ritual
precinct. The interactions surrounding this aggregation
ritual permitted inland hunter-gatherers indirectly
to gain access to rich coastal resources that could
no longer be exploited directly and also provided a
means for the acquisition of maize and other durable
trade materials.
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ref:
2003/1 (4)
Hunter-gatherer
interactions: mutualism and resource
partitioning on the Island of Newfoundland
MAP Renouf
Archaeology Unit, Memorial University of Newfoundland,
St Johns, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada A1C
5S7
mapr@mun.ca
Keywords:
hunter-gatherers, mutualism, resource partitioning,
Newfoundland
Abstract
This
paper examines the interaction of two prehistoric cultures,
Recent Indian and Palaeoeskimo, who co-existed on the
Island of Newfoundland in northeastern Canada. I argue
that their relationship was both complementary and competitive,
based on their different economic patterns (niche differentiation),
both of which included an emphasis on the same coastal
resources (niche overlap). The implication of this is
that the behavioural characteristics (niche) of one
culture affected the niche of the other. I frame these
arguments within ecological models of species interactions.
I conclude by applying these models to the historic
Beothuk Indians of Newfoundland.
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ref:
2003/1 (5)
Rock-art
and relationships: an introduction
Paul
Faulstich
Environmental Studies, Pitzer College, 1050 N Mills
Avenue, Claremont, CA 91711, USA
paul_faulstich@pitzer.edu
Paul
SC Taçon
Anthropology, Australian Museum, 6 College Street, NSW
2010, Australia
pault@austmus.gov.au
Sven
Ouzman
Anthropology, 232 Kroeber Hall, University of California
at Berkeley, CA 94720-3710, USA
& Rock Art Department, National Museum, South Africa
ouzman@uclink.berkeley.edu
Keywords: rock-art, colonialism, landscape, ecology,
AURA congress
Abstract
This
paper introduces to the Before Farming readership a
selection of 14 rock-art-centric papers arranged around
three key human relationships. These comprise the relationships
people have with other people (colonialism), relationships
people have with places (landscape), and relationships
that people have with other animals and with plants
(ecology). Rock-art is a theoretically-informed artefact
capable of illuminating aspects of past and contemporary
human behaviour in new and insightful ways. The papers
presented in this and the next two issues of Before
Farming were originally presented at the Australian
Rock Art Research Association (AURA) conference held
in Alice Springs, Australia, July 2000. The issues these
papers address represent and extend contemporary anthropological
and archaeological concerns with time, place and identity.
We hope that the papers will also provide material for
contemplation, contestation and questing.
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ref:
2003/1 (6)
Indigenous
images of a colonial exotic: imaginings
from Bushman southern Africa
Sven Ouzman
Anthropology, 232 Kroeber Hall, University of California
at Berkeley, CA 94720-3710, USA
& Rock Art Department, National Museum, South Africa
ouzman@uclink.berkeley.edu
Keywords:
Southern Africa, Bushman, reverse gaze, colonialism
Abstract
Rock-art
is a powerful and theoretically informed artefact that
allows non-rock-art producing people an understanding
of the worldview of the rock-artists. But the flow of
information in such rock-art researches us
observing them via `their artefacts
is often asymmetrical and can be disempowering to the
rock-art-producing individuals and communities past
and present. Fortunately, rock-art is also able to balance
and even reverse this asymmetry. For example, there
are certain contact period Bushman rock
engravings and rock paintings in southern Africa that
were produced at and after the time of the colonisation
of southern Africa by non-Bushmen. Some of the power
relations between indigenes and colonists are made explicit
in the form of rock-paintings and rock-engravings. Specifically,
much of this rock-art shows how the Bushmen imagined
and imaged the colonists.
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ref:
2003/1 (7)
Rock-paintings
of exotic animals in the Sydney Basin, New South Wales,
Australia
John Clegg and Simon Ghantous
School of Archaeology, University of Sydney, NSW 2006,
Australia
jcless@mail.usyd.edu.au
Keywords:
Australia, Aboriginal rock-painting, sheep, bull
Abstract
Four
possible first sight Aboriginal rock-art
depictions of what may be sheep from the eponymous Sheep
Shelter in the Sydney basin, Australia are examined
in the light of the nature of colonial contact/invasion.
A common sense approach, with a view to
future multivariate analysis, is used to consider alternative
identifications of these images. Relevant comparative
rock-art from Bull Cave and Devils Rock are used
to extend and nuance this identification.
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ref:
2003/1 (8)
Colonial
collections of portable art and intercultural encounters
in Aboriginal Australia
Sally K May
Centre for Cross-Cultural Research, Australian National
University, Canberra ACT 0200, Australia
sally.may@anu.edu.au
Keywords:
American-Australian Scientific Expedition, Australia,
portable art
Abstract
From
March to November 1948, 17 scientists made up the American-Australian
Scientific Expedition (AASEAL) to Aboriginal North Australia.
This expedition collected over 50,000 archaeological,
ethnographic and natural history specimens from indigenous
Australians. By examining a history of colonial collection
strategies especially those informed by modernism
it is possible both to understand the dynamics
of AASEAL, from field experiences and encounters, collection
strategies and general colonial attitudes towards indigenous
Australians, to intercultural encounters.
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ref:
2003/1 (9)
The
history and future of New Zealand Maori rock-art
a tribal perspective
Gerard ORegan
Culture & Identity Manager, Ngai Tahu Development
Corporation, Te Waipounamu House, 158 Hereford Street,
Box 13-046, Christchurch, New Zealand
Gerard.ORegan@ngaitahu.iwi.nz
Keywords:
New Zealand, Maori, Ngai Tahu, rock-art custodianship
Abstract
Colonisation,
dispossession, land claims and cultural resurgence.
These are all phases in the recent colonial and post-colonial
history of New Zealand Maori rock-art. The greatest
concentration of this rock-art is found on New Zealands
South Island and was made by the ancestors of the Ngai
Tahu Whanui tribe. Rock-art represents a visual art
heritage for a people who have not maintained the Maori
wood carving traditions for which the North Island tribes
are renowned. With a view to protecting the works of
our ancestors and enriching the lives of present and
future generations, Ngai Tahu Whanui is today at the
fore of exploring inclusive ways to research, document,
manage and promote Maori rock-art.
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©
Western Academic & Specialist Press Ltd 2003
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