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Woodland Period rockshelter use in the Upper Great Lakes: A multiscalar perspective from Grand Island, Michigan.

机译:林地时期在上大湖地区的避难所用途:密歇根州格兰德岛的多尺度视角。

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摘要

Despite the integral role that caves and rockshelters have traditionally played in archaeological inquiry throughout North America, they have largely been neglected as a focus of study and recorded examples have been poorly integrated into regional discourse in the Upper Great Lakes region. Most rockshelters in the Upper Great Lakes region formed as sea caves during higher lake level stages and became increasingly terrestrial as lake levels receded, resulting in an abundance of rockshelters and other shoreline features that are now inland from the current shoreline, very few of which have been subjected to archaeological investigation. To address this disparity, archaeological testing of selected locations on Grand Island was conducted under the direction of the Grand Island Archaeological Program in June and July 2015 in an attempt to assess the research potential of these features. This field work successfully identified two Woodland period rockshelter sites located on Grand Island's southern shore, Moss Cave (FS 09-10-03-1076) and Miner's Pit Cave (FS 09-10-03-1077). These sites are interpreted using a multiscalar approach that articulates site-level patterns with other sources of information to draw comparisons from contemporaneous sites on Grand Island and similar rockshelter sites in the Upper Great Lakes region. Informed by a theoretical framework that seeks to accommodate the multiplicity and complexity of hunter-gatherer relationships with the landscape, and supported by ethnohistorical accounts, this research seeks to widen the interpretive potential of rockshelters in the Upper Great Lakes by arguing that these rockshelters were likely considered ceremonial spaces that provided a space to communicate with other-than-human entities, or the manitous.
机译:尽管在整个北美地区,洞穴和岩棚传统上一直在考古研究中发挥着不可或缺的作用,但它们在很大程度上已被忽略,只是研究重点,而所记录的实例却很少融入上大湖区的区域性讨论中。大湖上游地区的大多数岩棚在较高的湖水位阶段形成为海蚀洞,并随着湖水位的下降而变得越来越陆生,导致大量的岩棚和其他海岸线特征从目前的海岸线向内陆发展,其中很少有受到考古调查。为了解决这种差异,在大岛考古计划的指导下,于2015年6月和7月对大岛的选定地点进行了考古测试,以评估这些特征的研究潜力。这项野外工作成功地发现了位于格兰德岛南岸的两个林地时期的岩石掩护场,分别是莫斯洞穴(FS 09-10-03-1076)和矿工坑洞穴(FS 09-10-03-1077)。这些站点使用多标量方法进行解释,该方法将站点级别的模式与其他信息源结合起来,以对格兰德岛上的同期站点和上大湖区的类似石棚站点进行比较。在一个旨在适应猎人与采集者之间关系的多样性和复杂性的理论框架的指导下,并得到了民族历史学的支持,本研究试图通过论证这些岩石棚架很可能扩大上大湖地区的岩石棚架的解释潜力。被认为是礼仪空间,它提供了与非人类实体或礼仪性人物进行交流的空间。

著录项

  • 作者

    Hanson, Kelsey E.;

  • 作者单位

    Illinois State University.;

  • 授予单位 Illinois State University.;
  • 学科 Archaeology.;Native American studies.
  • 学位 M.S.
  • 年度 2016
  • 页码 170 p.
  • 总页数 170
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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