Indicators for Interactions from Legacy Worked and Unworked Faunal Assemblages from the Quackenbush Site, a Late Woodland Site in the Kawartha Lakes Region, Ontario

Christian Gates St-Pierre, S. Needs-Howarth, Marie Boisvert
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Abstract

The Quackenbush site (BdGm-l) is located in what is now Ontario, at the northeastern limit of the area known to have been occupied by the Huron-Wendat pre-dispersal and visited by the Anishinaabeg of the Canadian Shield. Excavations of portions of the site half a century ago uncovered parts of three longhouses and midden deposits. We generated the data presented here as part of a larger scholarly effort aimed at analyzing and writing up all of the material culture from the site. We investigate ways in which faunal remains can be used to inform on the nature of the activities conducted at the site and to trace past interactions between the site’s occupants and people living on the Canadian Shield and in the St. Lawrence Valley at that time, finding tentative evidence for the former and more conclusive evidence for the latter. We hypothesize that people originating from the St. Lawrence Valley were present at the Quackenbush site and making bone artifacts as a way of maintaining or negotiating identity.
安大略省卡瓦塔湖区晚期林地遗址Quackenbush遗址中工作和未工作动物群落的相互作用指标
Quackenbush遗址(bdgm - 1)位于现在的安大略省,位于已知的休伦-温达特人预分散占领地区的东北边界,加拿大地盾的Anishinaabeg曾访问过该地区。半个世纪前对部分遗址的挖掘发现了三个长屋和中间沉积物的部分。我们在这里提供的数据是一个更大的学术努力的一部分,目的是分析和撰写来自该网站的所有物质文化。我们研究了如何利用动物遗骸来了解在该遗址进行的活动的性质,并追踪该遗址的居住者与当时生活在加拿大地盾和圣劳伦斯山谷的人们之间的过去互动,为前者找到了初步证据,为后者找到了更确凿的证据。我们假设,来自圣劳伦斯谷的人出现在奎肯布什遗址,制作骨制品是一种保持或协商身份的方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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