Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-ndmmz Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-21T19:30:57.074Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Childhood Diet and Western Basin Tradition Foodways at the Krieger Site, Southwestern Ontario, Canada

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Christopher M. Watts
Affiliation:
Department of World Cultures, Royal Ontario Museum, 100 Queen's Park, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5S 2C6 (cwatts@rom.on.ca)
Christine D. White
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada N6A 5C2
Fred J. Longstaffe
Affiliation:
Department of Earth Sciences, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada N6A 5B7

Abstract

In this article, we discuss new stable isotope data obtained from human dental tissue at the Krieger site, a Late Woodland Western Basin Tradition occupation from southwestern Ontario, Canada. These data point to significant maize consumption within an otherwise diffuse subsistence economy and settlement pattern geared toward the occupation of short-term campsites. The degree of maize consumption at Krieger implies the necessity for storage and year-round use. We suggest that maize horticultural practices during this time were as intensive as those suggested for contemporary and more sedentary Iroquoian groups to the east yet were accommodated without major changes to other aspects of the subsistence-settlement regime. Furthermore, the absence of a breastfeeding signal in the dental tissue not only implicates women in the role of maize production but might also imply demographic consequences. Accordingly, and with reference to comparative data, we suggest that notions of food production be recast and decoupled from the advent of sedentary lifeways in the lower Great Lakes region.

Resumen

Resumen

Dans cet article, nous discutons de nouvelles données d'isotopes stables obtenues par l'entremise de tissus dentaires humains retrouvés au site Krieger. Ce site, au Sud-ouest de l'Ontario au Canada, est d'ancienne occupation du Sylvicole supérieur de la Tradition Western Basin. Ces données démontrent une consommation significative de maïs au sein, par ailleurs, d'une économie diffuse de subsistance et au sein de types de peuplement couplés à une occupation de campements à court terme. Ce niveau de consommation de maïs au site Krieger suppose qu'un entreposage était nécessaire et que le maïs était utilisé pendant toute l'année. Nous suggérons que les pratiques horticoles du maïs pendant cette période étaient aussi intensives que celles suggérées pour les groupes iroquoiens contemporains et plus sédentaires situés plus à l'est. Par contre, elles ont su répondre aux besoins sans apporter de changements majeurs quant à d'autres aspects du régime de peuplements de subsistance. De plus, l'absence de signe d"allaitement dans le tissu dentaire ne signifie pas seulement l'implication des femmes dans la production du maïs mais implique possiblement des conséquences démographiques. Par conséquent, et en se référant à des données comparatives, nous suggérons que les notions de la production de la nourriture soient remodelées et dissociées de Vavènement du style de vie nomade dans la région des Grands lacs inférieurs.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Allegretto, Kimberly 2007 Adopting Maize in the Eastern Woodlands of North America. Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Ambrose, Stanley H., and Norr, Lynette 1993 Experimental Evidence for the Relationship of the Carbon Isotope Ratios of Whole Diet and Dietary Protein to those of Bone Collagen and Carbonate. In Prehistoric Human Bone: Archaeology at the Molecular Level, edited by Joseph Lambert and Gisela Grape, pp. 137. Springer-Ver-lag, Berlin.Google Scholar
Barlow, K. Renee 2002 Predicting Maize Agriculture among the Fremont: An Economic Comparison of Farming and Foraging in the American Southwest. American Antiquity 67:6588.Google Scholar
Bechtel, Susan K., and Stothers, David M. 1993 New Perspectives on the Settlement-Subsistence System of the Late Woodland Western Basin Tradition, ca. 500-1300 A.D. North American Archaeologist 14:95122.Google Scholar
Bettinger, Robert, and Baumhoff, Martin A. 1982 The Numic Spread: Great Basin Cultures in Competition. American Antiquity 47:485503.Google Scholar
Binford, Lewis R. 1980 Willow Smoke and Dogs' Tails: Hunter Gatherer Settlement Systems and Archaeological Site Formation. American Antiquity 45:420.Google Scholar
Chapdelaine, Claude 1993 The Sedentarization of the Prehistoric Iroquoians: A Slow or Rapid Transformation? Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 12:173209.Google Scholar
Chilton, Elizabeth S. 1999 Mobile Farmers of Pre-Contact Southern New England: The Archaeological and Ethnohistoric Evidence. In Current Northeast Paleoethnobotany, edited by John P. Hart, pp. 157176. Bulletin No. 494. New York State Museum, Albany.Google Scholar
Chilton, Elizabeth S. 2005 Farming and Social Complexity in the Northeast. In North American Archaeology, edited by Timothy R. Pauketat and Diana DiPaolo Loren, pp. 138160. Black-well, Maiden, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Chilton, Elizabeth S. 2006 The Origin and Spread of (Zea mays) in New England. In Histories of Maize: Multidisciplinary Approaches to the Prehistory, Linguistics, Biogeography, Domestication and Evolution of Maize, edited by John Staller, Robert Tykot, and Bruce Benz, pp. 539548. Elsevier Press, Burlington, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Chilton, Elizabeth S. 2008 So Little Maize, So Much Time: Understanding Maize Adoption in New England. In Current Northeast Paleoethnobotany II, edited by John P. Hart, 5359. Bulletin No. 512. New York State Museum, Albany.Google Scholar
Chilton, Elizabeth S., Largy, Tonya Baroody, and Curran, Kathryn 2000 Evidence for Prehistoric Maize Horticulture at the Pine Hill Site, Deerfield, Massachusetts. Northeast Anthropology 59:2346.Google Scholar
Cooper, Martin 1982 A Preliminary Report on the Carbonized Plant Remains from the Dymock Villages (AeHj-2). Kewa 82(4):210.Google Scholar
Coplen, Tyler B. 1994 Reporting of Stable Hydrogen, Carbon and Oxygen Isotopic Abundances. Pure and Applied Chemistry 66:271276.Google Scholar
Crawford, Gary W., and Smith, David G. 2003 Paleoethnobotany in the Northeast. In People and Plants in Ancient North America, edited by Paul E. Minnis, pp. 172257. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Crawford, Gary W., Saunders, Delia, and Smith, David G. 2006 Pre-Contact Maize from Ontario, Canada: Context, Chronology, Variation, and Plant Association. In Histories of Maize: Multidisciplinary Approaches to the Prehistory, Linguistics, Biogeography, Domestication and Evolution of Maize, edited by John Staller, Robert Tykot, and Brace Benz, pp. 549559. Elsevier Press, Burlington, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Crawford, Gary W., Smith, David G., and Boyer, Vandy 1997 Dating the Entry of Corn (Zea mays) into the Lower Great Lakes Region. American Antiquity 62:112119.Google Scholar
Demeritt, David 1991 Agriculture, Climate, and Cultural Adaptation in the Prehistoric Northeast. Archaeology of Eastern North America 19:183202.Google Scholar
DeNiro, Michael J. 1985 Post-mortem Preservation and Alteration of “In Vivo” Bone Collagen Isotope Ratios in Relation to Paleodietary Reconstruction. Nature 317:806809.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
DeNiro, Michael J., and Weiner, Stephen 1988 Chemical, Enzymatic and Spectroscopic Characterization of “Collagen” and Other Organic Fractions from Prehistoric Bones. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 52:21972206.Google Scholar
Dewar, G., Ginter, J. K., Shook, B. A. S., Ferris, N., and Henderson, H. 2010 A Bioarchaeological Study of a Western Basin tradition cemetery on the Detroit River. Journal of Archaeological Science 37:22452254.Google Scholar
Dodd, Christine F, Poulton, Dana R., Smith, David G., and Warrick, Gary A. 1990 The Middle Ontario Iroquoian Stage. In The Archaeology of Southern Ontario to A. D. 1650, edited by Chris J. Ellis and Neal Ferris, pp. 321360. Occasional Publication of the London Chapter No. 5, Ontario Archaeological Society, London, Ontario.Google Scholar
Environment Canada 2009 Canadian Climate Normals 1971–2000 for Chatham, WPCP, Ontario. Electronic document, http://climate.weath-eroffice.ec.ga/climate_norrnals/results_e.html, accessed November 9, 2009.Google Scholar
Ericson, Jonathan E., West, Michael, Sullivan, Charles H., and Krueger, Harold W. 1989 The Development of Maize Agriculture in the Viru Valley, Peru. In The Chemistry of Prehistoric Bone, edited by T. Douglas Price, pp. 680704. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Ferris, Neal 1999 Telling Tales: Interpretive Trends in Southern Ontario Late Woodland Archaeology. Ontario Archaeology 68:162.Google Scholar
Ferris, Neal, and Mayer, Robert 1990 Rescue Excavations of the Younge Phase Cherry Lane (AaHp-21) Site, Leamington, Essex County, Ontario. Report on file, Ontario Ministry of Culture, London, Ontario.Google Scholar
Ferris, Neal, and Spence, Michael W. 1995 The Woodland Traditions in Southern Ontario. Revista de Arqueologia Americana 9:83138.Google Scholar
Fitting, James E. 1965 Late Woodland Cultures of Southeastern Michigan. Anthropological Papers No. 24. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Fitting, James E. 1970 The Archaeology of Michigan. Natural History Press, Garden City, New York.Google Scholar
Fogel, Marilyn L., Tuross, Noreen, and Owsley, Douglas 1989 Nitrogen Isotope Tracers of Human Lactation in Modern and Archaeological Populations. Annual Report of the Director, Geophysical Laboratory, Carnegie Institution of Washington, 1988–1989, pp. 111116.Google Scholar
Fogel, Marilyn L., Tuross, Noreen, Johnson, Beverly J., and Miller, Gifford H. 1997 Biogeochemical Record of Ancient Humans. Organic Geochemistry 27(5/6):275287.Google Scholar
Fox, William A. 1982 An Initial Report on the Dymock Villages (AeHj-2). Kewa 82(1):29.Google Scholar
France, Robert L. 1995 Differentiation Between Literal and Pelagic Food Webs in Lakes Using Stable Carbon Isotopes. Limnology and Oceanography 40:13101313.Google Scholar
Geissler, Catherine, and Powers, Hilary 2000 Human Nutrition. 11 th ed. Elsevier Press, Edinburgh.Google Scholar
Graham, Martha 1994 Mobile Farmers: An Ethnoarchaeological Approach to Settlement Organization Among the Rarámuri of Northwestern Mexico. International Monographs in Prehistory, Ethnoarchaeological Series No. 3, Ann Arbor, Michigan.Google Scholar
Greenman, Emerson F. 1937 The Younge Site: An Archaeological Record from Michigan. Occasional Contribution No. 6, Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Hard, Robert J., and Merrill, William L. 1992 Mobile Agriculturalists and the Emergence of Sedentism: Perspectives from Northern Mexico. American Anthropologist (New Series) 94:601620.Google Scholar
Harrison, Roman G., and Anne Katzenberg, M. 2003 Paleodiet Studies Using Stable Carbon Isotopes from Bone Appetite and Collagen: Examples from Southern Ontario and San Nicholas Island, California. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 22:227244.Google Scholar
Hart, John P. 1999 Maize Agriculture Evolution in the Eastern Woodlands of North America: A Darwinian Perspective. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 6:137180.Google Scholar
Hart, John P. 2001 Maize, Matrilocality, Migration, and Northern Iroquoian Evolution. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 8:151182.Google Scholar
Hart, John P., and Brumbach, Hetty Jo 2003 The Death of Owasco. American Antiquity 68:737752.Google Scholar
Hart, John P., Brumbach, Hetty Jo, and Lusteck, Robert 2007 Extending the Phytolith Evidence for Early Maize (Zea mays ssp. mays) and Squash (Cucurbita sp.) in Central New York. American Antiquity 72:563583.Google Scholar
Hart, John P., and Means, Bernard K. 2002 Maize and Villages: A Summary and Critical Assessment of Current Northeast Early Late Prehistoric Evidence. In Northeast Subsistence-Settlement Change: A.D. 700–1300, edited by John P. Hart and Christina B. Rieth, pp. 345358. Bulletin No. 496. New York State Museum, Albany.Google Scholar
Hart, John P., and Rieth, Christina B. (editors) 2002 Northeast Subsistence-Settlement Change: A.D. 700–1300. Bulletin No. 496. New York State Museum, Albany.Google Scholar
Hecky, R. E., and Hesslein, R. H. 1995 Contributions of Benthic Algae to Lake Food Webs as Revealed by Stable Isotope Analysis. Journal of the North American Benthological Society 14:631653.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heidenreich, Conrad 1971 Huronia: A History and Geography of the Huron Indians 1600–1650. McClelland and Stewart, Toronto.Google Scholar
Hitchcock, Robert K., and Ebert, James I. 1984 Foraging and Food Production among Kalahari Hunter/Gatherers. In From Hunters to Farmers: The Causes and Consequences of Food Production in Africa, edited by J. Desmond Clarke and Steven A. Brandt, pp. 328348. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Howland, M.R., Corr, L. T., Young, S. M. M., Jones, V., Jim, S., van der Merwe, N. J., Mitchell, A. D., and Evershed, R. P. 2003 Expression of the Dietary Isotope Signal in the Compound Specific δl3C Values of Pig Bone in Lipids and Amino Acids. International Journal of Osteoarchaeology 13:5465.Google Scholar
Ingold, Tim 2000 The Perception of the Environment: Essays in livelihood, dwelling and skill. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Jarvis, Dale 1996 Analysis of the Trent University Ceramic Collection from the Krieger Site Near Chatham. Kewa 96(2):213.Google Scholar
Jim, Susan, Ambrose, Stanley H., and Evershed, Richard P. 2004 Stable Carbon Isotopic Evidence for Differences in the Dietary Origin of Bone Cholesterol, Collagen and Apatite: Implications for their Use in Paleodietary Reconstruction. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 68:6172.Google Scholar
Johnson, Brett M., Martinez, Patrick J., and Stockwell, Jason D. 2002 Tracking Trophic Interactions in Cold Water Reservoirs Using Naturally Occurring Stable Isotopes. Transactions of the American Fisheries Society 131:113.Google Scholar
Kapches, Mima 1995 Chaos Theory and Social Movements: A Theoretical View of the Formation of the Northern Iroquoian Longhouse Cultural Pattern. In Origins of the People of the Longhouse: Proceedings of the 21st Annual Symposium of the Ontario Archaeological Society Inc., edited by André Bekerman and Gary Warrick, pp. 8696. Ontario Archaeological Society, Toronto.Google Scholar
Katzenberg, M. Anne 2006 Prehistoric Maize in Southern Ontario: Contributions from Stable Isotope Studies. In Histories of Maize: Multidisciplinary Approaches to the Prehistory, Linguistics, Biogeography, Domestication and Evolution of Maize, edited by John Staller, Robert Tykot, and Bruce Benz, pp. 263273. Elsevier Press, Burlington, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Katzenberg, M. Anne 1989 Stable Isotope Analysis of Archaeological Faunal Remains from Southern Ontario. Journal of Archaeological Science 16:319329.Google Scholar
Katzenberg, M. Anne, and Schwarcz, Henry P. 1986 Paleonutrition in Southern Ontario: Evidence from Strontium and Stable Isotopes. Canadian Journal of Anthropology 5:1522.Google Scholar
Katzenberg, M. Anne, and Weber, Andrej 1999 Stable Isotope Ecology and Paleodiet in the Lake Baikal Region of Siberia. Journal of Archaeological Science 26:651659.Google Scholar
Katzenberg, M. Anne, Ann Herring, D., and Saunders, Shelley R. 1996 Weaning and Infant Mortality: Evaluating the Skeletal Evidence. Yearbook of Physical Anthropology 39:177199.Google Scholar
Katzenberg, M. Anne, Schwarcz, Henry P., Knyf, Martin, and Jerome Melbye, F. 1995 Stable Isotope Evidence for Maize Horticulture and Paleodiet in Southern Ontario, Canada. American Antiquity 60:335350.Google Scholar
Kent, Susan 1989 Cross-cultural Perceptions of Farmers as Hunters and the Value of Meat. In Farmers as Hunters: The Implications of Sedentism, edited by Susan Kent, pp. 117. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Kenyon, Ian T., Ferris, Neal, and Hagerty, Wayne 1988 Western Basin Occupations of the Robson Road (AaHp-20) Site. Kewa 88(5):324.Google Scholar
Kidd, Kenneth E. 1954 A Woodland Site Near Chatham, Ontario. Transactions of the Royal Canadian Institute 30:141178. Toronto.Google Scholar
Kidd, Kenneth E. 1956 A Brief Study of the Human Remains from the Krieger Woodland Site in Southwestern Ontario. Pennsylvania Archaeologist 26:1526.Google Scholar
Krakker, James Joseph 1983 Changing Sociocultural Systems During the Late Prehistoric Period in Southeast Michigan. 2 vols. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Krueger, Harold W., and Sullivan, Charles H. 1984 Models for Carbon Isotope Fractionation between Diet and Bone. In Stable Isotopes in Nutrition, edited by Judith R. Turnland and Phyliss E. Johnson, pp. 205222. American Chemical Society Symposium Series 258, American Chemical Society, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Last, Joseph H. 1974 Archaeological Site Record Forms and Field Notes. Trent University Expedition (under the supervision of R. Inglis), October 1970. Manuscript on file, Department of Anthropology, Trent University, Peterborough.Google Scholar
Lee, Thomas E. 1952 A Preliminary Report on an Archaeological Survey of Southwestern Ontario for 1950. National Museum of Canada Bulletin 126:6475. Ottawa.Google Scholar
Lee-Thorp, Julia, Sealy, Judy C., and van der Merwe, Nikolaas J. 1989 Stable Carbon Isotope Ratio Differences between Bone Collagen and Bone Apatite, and their Relationship to Diet. Journal of Archaeological Science 16:585599.Google Scholar
Lee-Thorp, Julia, Sealy, Judy C., and van der Merwe, Nikolaas J. 1991 Aspects of Chemistry of Modern and Fossil Biological Apatites. Journal of Archaeological Science 18:343354.Google Scholar
Lennox, Paul A. 1982 The Bruner-Colasanti Site: An Early Late Woodland Component, Essex County, Ontario. Mercury Series No. 110, Archaeological Survey of Canada, National Museum of Man, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Lennox, Paul A., and Eldon Molto, J. 1995 The Archaeology and Physical Anthropology of the E.C. Row Site: A Springwells Phase Settlement, Essex County, Ontario. Ontario Archaeology 60:539.Google Scholar
Longin, R. 1971 New Method of Collagen Extraction for Radiocarbon Dating. Nature 230:241242.Google Scholar
Mariotti, André 1983 Atmospheric Nitrogen Is a Reliable Standard for Natural l5N Abundance Measurements. Nature 303:685687.Google Scholar
Martin, Scott W.J. 2008 Languages Past and Present: Archaeological Approaches to the Appearance of Northern Iroquoian Speakers in the Lower Great Lakes Region of North America. American Antiquity 73:441463.Google Scholar
Martinek, Dain 1998 Oneota Food Storage Technology: Experiment in Pit Storage of Maize. University of Wisconsin-La Crosse Journal of Undergraduate Research 1:89102.Google Scholar
Metcalfe, Jessica Z., Longstaffe, Fred J., and White, Christine D. 2009 Method-Dependent Variations in Stable Isotope Results for Structural Carbonate in Bone Bioapatite. Journal of A rchaeological Science 36:110121.Google Scholar
Minnis, Paul E., and Redman, Charles E. (editors) 1990 Perspectives on Southwestern Prehistory. Westview Press, Boulder, Colorado Google Scholar
Murdock, George P. 1969 Correlations of Exploitative and Settlement Patterns. In Contributions to Anthropology: Ecological Essays, edited by David Damas, pp. 129150. Bulletin No. 230. National Museum of Canada, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Murdock, George P., and Wilson, Suzanne F. 1972 Settlement Patterns and Community Organization: Cross-Cultural Codes 3. Ethnology 11:254295.Google Scholar
Murphy, Carl, and Ferris, Neal 1990 The Late Woodland Western Basin Tradition in Southwestern Ontario. In The Archaeology of Southern Ontario to A.D. 1650, edited by Chris J. Ellis and Neal Ferris, pp. 189278. Occasional Publication of the London Chapter No. 5. Ontario Archaeological Society, London, Ontario.Google Scholar
Nerlove, Sara B. 1974 Women's Workload and Infant Feeding Practices: A Relationship with Demographic Implications. Ethnology 13:125214.Google Scholar
Niemczycki, Mary A. 1984 The Origin and Development of the Seneca and Cayuga Tribes of New York State. Research Records No. 17. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester, New York.Google Scholar
Noble, William C. 1975 Corn and the Development of Village Life in Southern Ontario. Ontario Archaeology 25:3746.Google Scholar
O'Leary, Marion 1988 Carbon Isotopes in Photosynthesis. Bioscience 38:328336.Google Scholar
O'Shea, John M. 1988 Social Organization and Mortuary Behavior in the Late Woodland Period in Michigan. In Interpretations of Culture Change in the Eastern Woodlands during the Late Woodland Period, edited by Richard W. Yerkes, pp. 6885. Occasional Papers in Anthropology No. 3. Department of Anthropology, The Ohio State University, Columbus.Google Scholar
Pelto, Gretel H. 2000 Perspectives on Infant Feeding: Decision-Making and Ecology. In Nutritional Anthropology: Biocultural Perspectives on Food and Nutrition, edited by Alan H. Goodman, Darna L. Dufour, and Gretel H. Pelto, pp. 298311. Mayfield, Mountain View, California.Google Scholar
Prahl, Earl J., Brose, David S., and Stothers, David M. 1976 A Preliminary Synthesis of Late Prehistoric Phenomena in the Western Basin of Lake Erie. In The Late Prehistory of the Lake Erie Drainage Basin: A 1972 Symposium Revised, edited by David S. Brose, pp. 251282. Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Cleveland, Ohio.Google Scholar
Prezzano, Susan C. 1997 Warfare, Women and Households: The Development of Iroquois Culture. In Women in Prehistory: North America and Mesoamerica, edited by Cheryl Claassen and Rosemary A. Joyce, pp. 8899. University of Pennsylvania Press. Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Prevac, Rosemary 1988 The Robson Road (AaHp-20) Faunal Report. Report on file, Ontario Ministry of Culture, London, Ontario.Google Scholar
Redmond, Brian G. 2005 Saving the Danbury Site (33Ot16): Investigation of Woodland to Late Prehistoric Settlement and Mortuary Behavior along the Lake Erie Shore. Current Research in Ohio Archaeology, 2005. Electronic document, http://www.ohioarchaeology.org/joomla/index.php, accessed November 12, 2009.Google Scholar
Reid, Peter 1981 Investigations at the Cherry Lane Site (Essex County, Ontario) in 1980. Manuscript on file, Ontario Ministry of Culture, London, Ontario.Google Scholar
Reid, Peter 1982 Investigations at the Robson Road Site (Essex County, Ontario) in 1981. Manuscript on file, Ontario Ministry of Culture, London, Ontario.Google Scholar
Reimer, Paula J., Baillie, Mike G. L., Bard, Edouard, Bayliss, Alex, Warren Beck, J., Bertrand, Chanda J. H., Blackwell, Paul G., Buck, Caitlin E., Burr, George S., Cutler, Kirsten B., Damon, Paul E., Lawrence Edwards, R., Fairbanks, Richard G., Friedrich, Michael, Guilderson, Thomas P., Hogg, Alan G., Hughen, Konrad A., Kromer, Bernd, McCormac, Gerry, Manning, Sturt, Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Reimer, Ron W., Remmele, Sabine, Southon, John R., Stuiver, Minze, Talamo, Sahra, Taylor, F. W., van der Plicht, Johannes, and Weyhenmeyer, Con-stanze E. 2004 INTCAL04 Terrestrial Radiocarbon Age Calibration, 0-26 CALKYRBP Radiocarbon 46:10291058.Google Scholar
Ritchie, William A. 1969 The Archaeology of New York State. Natural History Press, Garden City, New York.Google Scholar
Ritchie, William A., and Funk, Robert E. 1973 Aboriginal Settlement Patterns in the Northeast. Memoir No. 20. New York State Museum and Science Service, The University of the State of New York, Albany.Google Scholar
Rutherford, A. A., Wittenberg, J., and McCallum, K. J. 1975 University of Saskatchewan Radiocarbon Dates VI. Radiocarbon 17:328353.Google Scholar
Schurr, Mark R., and Redmond, Brian G. 1991 Stable Isotope Analysis of Incipient Maize Horticul-turalists from the Gard Island 2 Site. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 16:6884.Google Scholar
Schwarcz, Henry P., Melbye, Jerome, Anne Katzenberg, M., and Knyf, Martin 1985 Stable Isotopes in Human Skeletons of Southern Ontario: Reconstructing Paleodiet. Journal of Archaeological Science 12:187206.Google Scholar
Scott, William B., and Crossman, Edwin J. 1973 Freshwater Fishes of Canada. Fisheries Research Board of Canada, Bulletin 184. Government of Canada, Department of Fisheries and Oceans, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Smith, Bruce D. 2001 Low-level Food Production. Journal of Archaeological Research 9:143.Google Scholar
Smith, Bruce N., and Epstein, Samuel 1971 Two Categories of l3C/l2C Ratios for Higher Plants. Plant Physiology 47:380384.Google Scholar
Snow;, Dean R. 1996 More on Migration in Prehistory. Accommodating New Evidence in the Northern Iroquoian Case. American Antiquity 61:791796.Google Scholar
Speal, C. Scott 2006 The Social Implications of Younge Complex Mortuary Ritual: A Survey of Post-Mortem Skeletal Modifications from Riviere au Vase, Michigan. Archaeology of Eastern North America 34:128.Google Scholar
Spence, Michael W. 2007 The Roffelsen Site Burial. Manuscript on file, Department of Anthropology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario.Google Scholar
Stothers, David M. 1977 The Princess Point Complex. Mercury Series No. 58. Archaeological Survey of Canada, National Museum of Man, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Stothers, David M., and Abel, Timothy J. 2002 The Early Late Woodland in the Southwestern Lake Erie Littoral Region. In Northeast Subsistence-Settlement Change: A.D. 700–1300, edited by John P. Hart and Christina B. Rieth, pp. 7396. Bulletin No. 496. New York State Museum, Albany.Google Scholar
Stothers, David M., and Bechtel, Susan K. 1987 Stable Carbon Isotope Analysis: An Inter-regional Perspective. Archaeology of Eastern North America 15:137154.Google Scholar
Stothers, David M., and Bechtel, Susan K. 2000 The Land between the Lakes: New Perspectives on the Late Woodland (ca. A.D. 500–1300) Time Period in the Region of the St. Clair-Detroit River System. In Cultures Before Contact: The Late Prehistory of Ohio and Surrounding Regions, edited by Robert A. Genheimer, pp. 251. The Ohio Archaeological Council, Columbus.Google Scholar
Stothers, David M., Graves, James R., and Redmond, Brian G. 1984 The Sandusky and Western Basin Traditions: A Comparative Analysis of Settlement-Subsistence Systems. Toledo Area Aboriginal Research Bulletin 13.Google Scholar
Stothers, David M., and Yarnell, Richard A. 1977 An Agricultural Revolution in the Lower Great Lakes. In Geobotany, edited by R. C. Romans, pp. 209232. Plenum Press, New York.Google Scholar
Stuiver, M., and Reimer, P. J. 1993 Extended l4C Database and Revised CALIB Radiocarbon Calibration Program. Radiocarbon 35:215230.Google Scholar
Terrell, John Edward, Hart, John P., Barut, Sibel, Cellinese, Nicoletta, Curet, Antonio, Denham, Tim, Kusimba, Chapurukha M., Latinis, Kyle, Oka, Rahul, Palka, Joel, Pohl, Mary E. D., Pope, Kevin O., Williams, Patrick Ryan, Haines, Helen, and Staller, John E. 2003 Domesticated Landscapes: The Subsistence Ecology of Plant and Animal Domestication. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 10:323368.Google Scholar
Thompson, Robert G., Hart, John P., Brumbach, Hetty Jo, and Lusteck, Robert 2004 Phytolith Evidence for Twentieth-Century B.P. Maize in Northern Iroquoia. Northeast Anthropology 68:2539.Google Scholar
Timmins, Peter A. 1997 The Calvert Site: An Interpretive Framework for the Early Iroquoian Village. Mercury Series No. 156. Archaeological Survey of Canada, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Tieszen, Larry L., and Fagre, Tim 1993 Effect of Diet Quality and Composition on the Isotopic Composition of Respiratory C02 Bone Collagen, Bioapatite, and Soft Tissues. In Prehistoric Human Bone: Archaeology at the Molecular Level, edited by Joseph Lambert and Gisela Grupe, pp. 121155. Springer-Verlag, Berlin.Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce G. 1976 The Children of Aataensic: A History of the Huron People to 1660. 2 vols. McGill-Queen’s University Press, Montreal.Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce G. 1981 Prehistoric Social and Political Organization: An Iroquoian Case Study. In Foundations of Northeast Archaeology, edited by D. R. Snow, pp. 150. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
van der Merwe, Nikolaas J., and Vogel, Johannes C. 1978 3C Content of Human Collagen as a Measure of Prehistoric Diet in Woodland North America. Nature 276:815816.Google Scholar
van der Merwe, Nikolaas J., Williamson, Ronald F., Pfeiffer, Susan, Thomas, Stephen Cox, and Allegretto, Kim Oakberg 2003 The Moatfield Ossuary: Isotopic Dietary Analysis of an Iroquoian Community, using Dental Tissue. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 22:245261.Google Scholar
Zanden, Vander, Jake, M., and Rasmussen, Joseph B. 1996 A Trophic Position Model of Pelagic Food Webs: Impact on Contaminant Bioaccumulation in Lake Trout. Ecological Monographs 66:451477.Google Scholar
Vigouroux, Yves, Glaubitz, Jeffrey C., Matsuoka, Yoshihiro, Goodman, Major M., Sanchez G., Jesús, and Doebley, John 2008 Population Structure and Genetic Diversity of New World Maize Races Assessed by DNA Microsatellites. American Journal of Botany 95:12401253.Google Scholar
Vogel, J.C., and van der Merwe, Nikolaas J. 1977 lsotopic Evidence for Early Maize Cultivation in New York State. American Antiquity 42:238242.Google Scholar
Warrick, Gary 1984 Reconstructing Ontario Iroquoian Village Organization. Mercury Series No. 124. Archaeological Survey of Canada, National Museum of Man, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Warrick, Gary 2000 The Precontact Iroquoian Occupation of Southern Ontario. Journal of World Prehistory 14:415466.Google Scholar
Watson, Patty Jo 1988 Prehistoric Gardening and Agriculture in the Midwest and Midsouth. In Interpretations of Culture Change in the Eastern Woodlands during the Late Woodland Period, edited by Richard W. Yerkes, pp. 3967. Occasional Papers in Anthropology No. 3. Department of Anthropology, The Ohio State University, Columbus.Google Scholar
Watson, Patty Jo 1989 Early Plant Cultivation in the Eastern Woodlands of North America. In Foraging and Farming: The Evolution of Plant Exploitation, edited by David R. Harris and Gordon C. Hillman, pp. 555571. Unwin Hyman, London.Google Scholar
Watson, Patty Jo, and Kennedy, Mary C. 1991 The Development of Horticulture in the Eastern Woodlands of North America: Women's Role. In Engendering Archaeology, edited by Joan Gero and Margaret Conkey, pp. 255274. Basil Blackwell, Oxford.Google Scholar
Watts, Christopher M. 2008 Pot/Potter Entanglements and Networks of Agency in Late Woodland Period (c. AD 900–1300) Southwestern Ontario, Canada. BAR International Series S1828. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford.Google Scholar
Weiner, Stephen, and Yosef, Ofar Bar 1990 States of Preservation of Bones from Prehistoric Sites in the Near East: A Survey. Journal of Archaeological Science 17:187196.Google Scholar
White, Christine D., Longstaffe, Fred J., and Law, Kimberley R. 2004 Exploring the Effects of Environment, Physiology and Diet on Oxygen Isotope Ratios in Ancient Nubian Bones and Teeth. Journal of Archaeological Science 31:233250.Google Scholar
White, Christine D., Pendergast, David M., Longstaffe, Fred J., and Law, Kimberley R. 2001 Social Complexity and Food Systems at Altun Ha, Belize: The lsotopic Evidence. Latin American Antiquity 12:371393.Google Scholar
White, Christine D., Longstaffe, Fred J., Spence, Michael W., and Law, Kimberley R. 2000 Teotihuacan State Representation at Kaminaljuyú: Evidence from Oxygen Isotopes. Journal of Anthropological Research 56:535558.Google Scholar
Whitney, Ellie N., and Rolfes, Sharon R. 2002 Understanding Nutrition. 9th ed. Wadsworth Group, Belmont, California.Google Scholar
Williams, Jocelyn, White, Christine D., and Longstaffe, Fred J. 2005 Trophic Level and Macronutrient Shift Effects Associated with the Weaning Process in the Post-Classic Maya. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 128:781790.Google Scholar
Williamson, Ronald F. 1990 The Early Iroquoian Period of Southern Ontario. In The Archaeology of Southern Ontario to A.D. 1650, edited by Chris J. Ellis and Neal Ferris, pp. 291320. Occasional Publication of the London Chapter No. 5. Ontario Archaeological Society, London, Ontario.Google Scholar
Wright, Lori E., and Schwarcz, Henry P. 1998 Stable Carbon and Oxygen Isotopes in Human Tooth Enamel: Identifying Breast-feeding and Weaning in Prehistory. American Journal of Physical Anthropology 106:118.Google Scholar
Wrong, George M. 1939 Sagard’s Long Journey to the Country of the Hurons. Champlain Society, Toronto.Google Scholar
Yarnell, Richard Asa 1964 Aboriginal Relationships Between Culture and Plant Life in the Upper Great Lukes Region. Anthropological Papers No. 23. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Young, Suzanne M. M. 2002 Metabolic Mechanisms and the lsotopic Investigation of Ancient Diets. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Yurtsever, Yuecel, and Gat, Joel R. 1981 Atmospheric Waters. In Stable Isotope Hydrology: Deuterium and Oxygen–18 in the Water Cycle, edited by Joel R. Gat and R. Gonfiantini, pp. 103142. Technical Report Series No. 210. International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna.Google Scholar
Zvelebil, Marek 1996 The Agricultural Frontier and the Transition to Agriculture in the Circum-Baltic Region. In The Origins and Spread of Agriculture and Pastoralism in Eurasia, edited by David R. Harris, pp. 323335. University of London Press, London.Google Scholar