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022 _a00659452
040 _cNMP LIBRARY
050 _aGN 1
_bA44 1979 v. 56 pt. 1
110 _aAmerican Museum of Natural History
245 _aThe anthropology of St. Catherines island : 2. the Refuge-Deptford mortuary complex :
_bAnthropological papers of the American Museum of Natural History /
_cThe American Museum of Natural History
250 _aVolume 56, Part 1.
260 _aNew York :
_bAmerican Museum of Natural History,
_c1979.
300 _a179 pages :
_billustrations (black and white) ;
_c27 cm.
490 _vVolume 56, Part 1.
500 _aIncludes bibliographical references.
505 _aChapter 1. mortuary archaelogy on the Georgia coast
_rLarsen, Clark Spencer
505 _aChapter 2. Archaeological techniques and procedures
_rThomas, David Hurst
505 _aChapter 3. The Cunningham mound group
_rThomas, David Hurst, Larsen, Clark Spencer and Lunsford, Ann Marie
505 _aChapter 4. Seaside mound group
_rThomas, David Hurst, Larsen, Clark Spencer and Lunsford, Ann Marie
505 _aChapter 5. Ceramics
_rDePratter, Chester B.
505 _aChapter 6. Comparisons
_rThomas, David Hurst
505 _aChapter 7. Implications and some speculations
_rThomas, David Hurst and Larsen, Clark Spencer
505 _aAppendix: Seasonal growth variations in the shells of recent and prehistoric specimens of Mercenaria mercenaria from St. Catherines island, Georgia
_rClark, George R. II
520 _a"Skeletal remains from the prehistoric coast of Georgia are the basis of this study. The effects of agriculture on the human skeleton are examined and explained in the present paper. The region was chosen because (1) there is a large skeletal series representative of both an early preagricultural adaptation (2200 B.C.-A.D. 1150) and a later mixed agricultural and hunting-gathering adaptation (A.D. 1 150-A.D. 1550); (2) the Georgia coast represents continuous in situ cultural development from at least 2200 B.C. to A.D. 1550, implying human biological continuity for at least 3500 years prior to European contact; and (3) the economic regime for the Georgia coast has been documented by a large body of archaeological and ethnohistoric data. A series of skeletal and dental changes are viewed in light of an adaptational model encompassing disease and size of the hard tissues-skeletal and dental-and their respective responses to the behavioral shift from a hunting and gathering lifeway to one that incorporated corn agriculture after A.D. 1150. The model consists of two parts. First, with the introduction of an agriculturebased diet and consequent increase in population size and density, the pathology reflecting a general rise in occurrence of infectious disease due to an expansion in population size and a high dietary carbohydrate base should increase. Second, with the adoption of corn as a major dietary constituent, the softer foodstuffs and more sedentary lifeway associated with that adaptation should result in a respective decrease in functional demand on the masticatory complex in particular and on the body in general. In addition, the element of poor nutrition should come into play in an economy in which plant domesticates, and corn in particular, are the focus of diet. The comparison and analysis of the pathology and metric data support the model. In addition, the detailed examination of these data by sex suggests that the behavioral alterations that occurred consequent to the change in lifeway differentially affected females."
546 _ain English.
650 _aAnthropology
_vPeriodicals.
700 _aThomas, David Hurst
700 _aLarsen, Clark Spencer
942 _2lcc
_cCR
_n0
999 _c2830
_d2830