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    Long Distance Logistic Mobility as an Organising Principle Among Northern Hunter-Gatherers: A Great Lakes Middle Holocene Settlement System

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    Publication date
    2005
    Author
    Donahue, Randolph E.
    Holman, M.B.
    Lovis, W.A.
    Keyword
    America
    United States of America
    Hunter-gatherer
    Settlement
    Great Lakes
    Middle Holocene
    Peer-Reviewed
    Yes
    
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    Concepts of residential and logistic mobility are applied to survey assemblages from multiple decades of research along the interior drainages of central lower Michigan. Drawing on the ethnographic record of boreal hunter-gatherers and archaeological interpretations of long-distance logistic mobility from the Mesolithic of northern England and continental Europe, it is argued that the importance of logistic mobility is underrepresented in summaries of northern hemisphere hunter-gatherers. Reconstruction of Middle Holocene environments suggests that the resource structure of the central Michigan uplands was one that fostered use of logistic mobility, and that interior Middle Archaic assemblages and site structures reveal special function activities systemically tied to residential and other special function sites at lower coastal elevations, as well as currently submerged under Lake Huron. We conclude that rising levels of Lake Huron ca. 4500 B.P. resulted in decreased land area, population packing, and a consequent shift to residential mobility by the Late Archaic. Further, the results of this analysis can serve as a comparative framework for recognizing the role of logistic mobility in the evolution of hunter-gatherer adaptive strategies in other regions.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10454/3201
    Version
    No full-text available in the repository
    Citation
    William, W.A., Donahue, R.E. and Holman, M.B. (2005). Long Distance Logistic Mobility as an Organising Principle Among Northern Hunter-Gatherers: A Great Lakes Middle Holocene Settlement System. American Antiquity. Vol. 70, No. 4, pp. 669-693.
    Link to publisher’s version
    http://www.saa.org/AbouttheSociety/Publications/AmericanAntiquity/tabid/124/Default.aspx
    Type
    Article
    Collections
    Life Sciences Publications

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