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Driekopseiland and the 'rain's magic power': history and landscape in a new interpretation of a Northern Cape rock engravingMorris, David Roger Neacalbann Mcintyre January 2002 (has links)
The rock engraving site of Driekopseiland, west of Kimberley in the Northern Cape is distinctively situated on glaciated basement rock in the bed of the Riet River, and has a wealth of over 3500 engravings, preponderantly geometric images. Most other sites in the region have greater proportions of, or are dominated by, animal imagery. In early interpretations, it was often considered that ethnicity was the principal factor in this variabilty. From the 1960s the focus shifted more to establishing a quantative definition of the site, and an emperical understanding of it within the emerging cultural and environmental history of the region. / Magister Artium - MA (Anthropology/Sociology)
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Household archaeology at the Scowlitz site, Fraser Valley, B.C.Morrison, Sandra Lynne 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines the role of the household in the social history of Sto:lo society, and
specifically its role in the development of social complexity. Based on the archaeological house
remains from the Scowlitz site, this research proposes a model for household archaeology in the
Fraser Valley as an independent line of evidence to investigate the emergence of Sto:lo social
complexity. The primary assumption of this research is that the physical structure of the house
itself is an accurate representation of its social counterpart, the household. Ethnohistorical and
ethnographic data demonstrate that Sto:lo house size and architectural design relate to the size,
status, and socio-economic behaviour of households. This thesis applies the model of household
archaeology to the Scowlitz data and specifically questions how house size and architectural
design change through time, and what these changes may indicate about the evolution of Sto:lo
society. Structural features from four superimposed houses at the site document a general
increase in house size over the past 3000 years, concurrent with increasingly greater investment
being placed in house construction. These changes appear to correspond to transformations in
the social and economic organization of ancient Sto:lo society, however future research is
necessary to build on the Scowlitz material, and further define the relationship between house
form, the household, and social change.
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Household archaeology at the Scowlitz site, Fraser Valley, B.C.Morrison, Sandra Lynne 05 1900 (has links)
This thesis examines the role of the household in the social history of Sto:lo society, and
specifically its role in the development of social complexity. Based on the archaeological house
remains from the Scowlitz site, this research proposes a model for household archaeology in the
Fraser Valley as an independent line of evidence to investigate the emergence of Sto:lo social
complexity. The primary assumption of this research is that the physical structure of the house
itself is an accurate representation of its social counterpart, the household. Ethnohistorical and
ethnographic data demonstrate that Sto:lo house size and architectural design relate to the size,
status, and socio-economic behaviour of households. This thesis applies the model of household
archaeology to the Scowlitz data and specifically questions how house size and architectural
design change through time, and what these changes may indicate about the evolution of Sto:lo
society. Structural features from four superimposed houses at the site document a general
increase in house size over the past 3000 years, concurrent with increasingly greater investment
being placed in house construction. These changes appear to correspond to transformations in
the social and economic organization of ancient Sto:lo society, however future research is
necessary to build on the Scowlitz material, and further define the relationship between house
form, the household, and social change. / Arts, Faculty of / Anthropology, Department of / Graduate
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Aboriginal clay figurines from the upper Rogue Valley in southwestern OregonDeich, Lyman Patrick 01 January 1980 (has links)
A study of 80 clay figurines from aboriginal sites in the upper Rogue River Valley in southwestern Oregon fails to reveal any connection with other figurines found in the Pacific Northwest and northern California. A preference for animal rather than human representations is demonstrated. The temporal distribution of the figurines is not known, but spatial distribution appears roughly coextensive with territories occupied by the upland Takelma at the time of Euro-American contact during the second quarter of the nineteenth century.
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