Description |
1 online resource (xxii, 394 pages) : illustrations, maps |
Contents |
Foreword / David Hurst Thomas -- Bioarchaeological Perspectives on Precontact Lifeways in the Great Basin Wetlands / Brian E. Hemphill, Clark Spencer Larsen -- No One Owns the Deceased! The Treatment of Human Remains from Three Great Basin Cases / Steven R. Simms, Anan W. Raymond -- Farmers, Foragers, and Adaptive Diversity: The Great Salt Lake Wetlands Project / Steven R. Simms -- Stable Carbon Isotopes and Great Salt Lake Wetlands Diet: Toward an Understanding of the Great Basin Formative / Joan Brenner Coltrain, Thomas W. Stafford Jr. -- Molecular Genetic Variation in Prehistoric Inhabitants of the Eastern Great Basin / Dennis H. O'Rourke, Ryan L. Parr, Shawn W. Carlyle -- A Biological Perspective on Prehistoric Human Adaptation in the Great Salt Lake Wetlands / Jason R. Bright, Carol J. Loveland -- Theoretical and Archaeological Insights into Foraging Strategies among the Prehistoric Inhabitants of the Stillwater Marsh Wetlands / Robert L. Kelly -- Prehistoric Subsistence Strategies in the Stillwater Marsh Region of the Carson Desert / Margaret J. Schoeninger -- Molecular Genetics and the Numic Expansion: A Molecular Investigation of the Prehistoric Inhabitants of Stillwater Marsh / Frederika A. Kaestle, Joseph G. Lorenz, David Glenn Smith -- Osteopathology of Carson Desert Foragers: Reconstructing Prehistoric Lifeways in the Western Great Basin / Clark Spencer Larsen, Dale L. Hutchinson -- An Examination of Wetland Adaptive Strategies in Harney Basin: Comparing Ethnographic Paradigms and the Archaeological Record / Albert C. Oetting |
Summary |
Annotation Anthropologists offer a new perspective on the archaeology of the US intermountain west by describing their research on three newly discovered assemblages of ancient human remains in Nevada, Oregon, and Utah that have more than doubled the available sample of human remains from the vast and important region of the continent. The skeletons all being from wetland lacustrine contexts, the contributors explore aspects of ancient lakeside adaptation of the desert west. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com) |
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Annotation Anthropologists offer a new perspective on the archaeology of the US intermountain west by describing their research on three newly discovered assemblages of ancient human remains in Nevada, Oregon, and Utah that have more than doubled the available sample of human remains from the vast and important region of the continent. The skeletons all being from wetland lacustrine contexts, the contributors explore aspects of ancient lakeside adaptation of the desert west |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 333-382) and index |
Notes |
English |
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Print version record |
Subject |
Indians of North America -- Great Basin -- Antiquities.
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Indians of North America -- Anthropometry -- Great Basin
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Human remains (Archaeology) -- Great Basin
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Indians -- Anthropometry -- Great Basin
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HISTORY -- State & Local -- General.
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Indians -- Anthropometry
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Antiquities
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Human remains (Archaeology)
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Indians of North America -- Anthropometry
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Indians of North America -- Antiquities
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Feuchtgebiet
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Archäologie
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Aufsatzsammlung
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Anthropometrie
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Vor- und Frühgeschichte
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Paläanthropologie
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SUBJECT |
Great Basin -- Antiquities.
http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh97006068
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Subject |
United States -- Great Basin
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Großes Becken
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Indianer.
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Hemphill, Brian E
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Larsen, Clark Spencer
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LC no. |
99043317 |
ISBN |
0585270147 |
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9780585270142 |
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0874806038 |
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9780874806038 |
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1607818051 |
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9781607818052 |
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