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Hommes et animaux dans les colonies françaises des petites Antilles du XVIIe siècle à la fin du XIXe siècle : changements, résiliences et adaptations mutuelles / Humans and animals in the French colonies of the Lesser Antilles from the 17th century to the end of the 19th century : changes, resilience and mutual adaptationsTomadini, Noémie 11 December 2018 (has links)
Les efforts récents portés sur l’archéologie des périodes historiques dans la Caraïbe permettent de se pencher sur la vie quotidienne des colons européens et des populations serviles dans les Petites Antilles françaises. Les vestiges fauniques apportent un éclairage complémentaire aux données textuelles pour documenter l’adaptation de ces nouveaux arrivants à un environnement insulaire qui leur était inconnu. L’étude archéozoologique a porté sur un ensemble de 27 sites de Guadeloupe, Martinique et Saint-Martin, couvrant la période de la colonisation européenne (première moitié du XVIIe siècle) aux temps qui ont suivi l’abolition de l’esclavage. Treize habitations, douze sites urbains, un atelier production de chaux et une épave de goélette ont livré un corpus de 18 101 restes identifiés, qui témoignent de l’exploitation de 176 espèces de vertébrés et d’invertébrés. Les espèces importées, en particulier le boeuf, les caprinés (mouton et chèvre) et le cochon, indiquent que les colons ont apporté avec eux les pratiques européennes. Néanmoins, la présence de 53 espèces de poissons et de 90 espèces d’invertébrés marins indiquent que les populations coloniales ont rapidement su exploiter la richesse de leur nouvel environnement. La faible présence de la morue dans les assembles a été remarqué, contrastant avec l’importance de ce taxon suggérée par les sources historiques. / Recent efforts in the archeology of historical periods in the Caribbean allow investigating the daily life of European settlers and servile populations in the French Lesser Antilles. Faunal remains provide an additional insight to textual data to document the adaptation of these newcomers to an insular environment that was unknown to them. The archaeozoological study focused on a set of 27 sites in Guadeloupe, Martinique and Saint-Martin, covering the period of European colonization (first half of the 17th century) to the times that followed the abolition of slavery. Thirteen habitations, twelve urban sites, a lime production workshop and a schooner wreckage yielded a corpus of 18,101 identified remains, which testify to the exploitation of 176 species of vertebrates and invertebrates. Imported species, especially beef, caprines (sheep and goat) and pig, indicate that settlers brought with them European practices. Nevertheless, the presence of 53 species of fish and 90 species of marine invertebrates indicates that colonial populations have been able to exploit the richness of their new environment. The low presence of cod in the assemblages was noted, contrasting with the importance of this taxon suggested by historical sources.
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Tafonomia como ferramenta zooarqueológica de interpretação: viés de representatividade óssea em sítios arqueológicos, paleontológico e etnográfico / Taphonomy as zoorchaeological interpretation tool: Deposicional bias in palaeontological, ethnographic and archaeological sitesBissaro Junior, Marcos César 12 June 2008 (has links)
Estudos tafonômicos são relevantes para o entendimento de contextos deposicionais em sítios paleontológicos e arqueológicos, podendo ser ferramenta útil na correta interpretação desses registros. Recorrente em estudos dessa natureza é o problema da equifinalidade, em que dois ou mais processos levam a um mesmo padrão final. No caso dos estudos zooarqueológicos esse problema se torna mais aparente, uma vez que dois fatores são responsáveis pela formação e configuração final da fauna depositada nos sítios arqueológicos, sendo eles a ação humana e a ação natural. Com a finalidade de gerar assinaturas tafonômicas para auxiliar na compreensão do registro arqueológico, o presente estudo utilizou uma coleção paleontológica (Cuvieri) e uma coleção etnográfica (Guajá) como \"controle\". Ao todo quatro coleções osteológicas de mamíferos de médio e grande porte (Mazama sp., Tapirus terrestris, Tayassu sp.) foram analisadas: coleção etnográfica dos índios Guajá (Maranhão, Brasil) onde somente o agente antrópico incidiu na formação; coleção paleontológica do sítio Cuvieri (Minas Gerais, Brasil) formada unicamente pelo agente natural; e coleção arqueológica dos sítios Lapa do Santo e Lapa das Boleiras (Minas Gerais - Brasil). Ferramentas consagradas na literatura zooarqueológica foram utilizadas, sendo a Densidade Óssea (VD - volume density) e o índice de Utilidade Alimentar (FUI - food utility index) os mais importantes, além de análises envolvendo fragmentação óssea, sinais de queima e marcas de corte. As análises comparativas realizadas geraram resultados significativos no que diz respeito à formação do registro arqueológico, e em última instância quanto às estratégias de subsistência das populações pré-históricas de Lagoa Santa. A partir de análises de correlação não paramétrica (Spearman) envidenciou-se ausência de correlação entre representatividade óssea (MAU - minimal animal unit) e utilidade alimentar (FUI - food utility index), bem como entre representatividade e densidade óssea (VD - volume density) no sítio etnográfico e no sítio arqueológico. Entretanto, houve correlação entre densidade e representatividade óssea no sítio paleontológico. Uma correlação estatisticamente não significativa entre MAU e FUI nos sítios arqueológicos era esperada, como corroborada pelo sítio etnográfico. No entanto, a correlação entre densidade e representatividade encontrada no sítio paleontológico não foi encontrada no sítio arqueológico o que pode ser explicado neste último caso, entre outros fatores, pela atividade humana. Análises de fragmentação óssea demonstraram diferenças significativas entre os sítios, principalmente quando considerados apenas os ossos longos, que são os mais processados para o consumo humano. A fragmentação apresentou-se maior nos sítios em que houve ação humana (etnográfico e arqueológicos). Com relação à queima e marcas de corte, foram obtidos resultados relevantes em termos etnográficos, demonstrando processamentos diferenciais entre os taxa analisados mesmo na ausência da ação de processos diagenéticos. Os resultados demonstram a utilidade de estudos comparativos entre coleções de diferentes contextos (e.g., paleontológicas, etnográficas, e arqueológicos) para melhor entendimento da gênese e da transformação de assembléias fósseis, minimizando assim o problema da equifinalidade. / To understand depositional contexts in archaeological and palaeontological sites, taphonomic studies are of relevant importance. One of the main questions about faunal representation in archaeological sites is the problem with equifinality, when similar patterns in time and space emerge from different conditions and processes. Human and natural agencies are the processes that affect the fossil assemblage recovered in archaeological sites; that, if not correctly understood, can lead to wrong interpretations. To solve this problem, taphonomic signatures of palaeontological (natural agency) and ethnographic collections (human agency) were used as a \"control\" to the interpretation of zooarchaeological record. Four osteological collections comprised of medium and large mammals (Mazama sp., Tapirus terrestris, Tayassu sp.) were analyzed: an ethnographic collection of Guajá indians (Maranhão, Brazil), a palaeontological collection of Cuvieri (Minas Gerais, Brazil) and two archaeological collections of Lapa do Santo and Lapa das Boleiras (Minas Gerais, Brazil). Bone density (VD - volume density) and utility index (FUI - food utility index) were the two main analytical tools used to characterize the collections, together with bone fragmentation, bone burning and cut marks analyses. Spearman correlation analysis shows no statistically significant results between FUI and animal representation (MAU), neither between MAU and bone density in the archaeological and ethnographic sites. Bone density correlates statistically with MAU in Cuvieri. No significant statistic correlation was obtained in archaeological and ethnographic context between MAU and FUI as expected. The absence of a significant statistic correlation between MAU and VD in the archaeological sites can be attributed to human agency. Bone fragmentation analyses revealed great fragmentation in the archaeological and the ethnographic sites when analyzing long bones only, since they are the most skeletal part modified by human processes. Bone burning and cut mark analyses revealed relevant ethnographic information about human processing of animal carcass even when no post-depositional bias has occurred. The analyses of palaeontological and ethnographic sites revealed information applicable to archaeological sites contributing to solve equifinality questions.
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Cut mark analysis of protohistoric bison remains from EfPm-27 utilizing the scanning electron microscopePollio, Cara Jean 13 April 2009
EfPm-27 is a Protohistoric bison pound and processing site located in Fish Creek Park in Calgary, Alberta. The site exhibited the presence of metal tools and macroscopically deceptive cut marks suggesting the potential for the presence of both metal and stone cut marks. Moulds of selected cut marks from the assemblage were made and examined with the scanning electron microscope (SEM) to verify or negate the use of metal tools for butchery at the site. SEM images of the cut mark moulds reveal micromorphology that is similar to experimental and published stone tool cut mark SEM images. No evidence for the use of metal tools for butchering was identified.
Protohistoric sites research could benefit from the use of SEM analysis of cut marks to distinguish between stone and metal tool use. This would provide important secondary evidence for metal trade items in scenarios where such artifacts may be beyond recovery. Conversely, the presence of metal artifacts at a site does not necessarily imply that they were used for butchery and this assertion must be verified by the presence of metal cut marks.
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A view from the shore: interpreting fish trap use in Comox Harbour through zooarchaeological analysis of fish remains from the Q'umu?xs Village site (DkSf-19), Comox Harbour, British ColumbiaCaldwell, Megan 29 August 2008 (has links)
This thesis presents the results of recent sampling of the Q’umu?xs Village site (DkSf-19) at Comox Harbour, British Columbia. Bucket auger and column sampling was undertaken to ascertain resource use patterns associated with the unique abundance of wooden stake fish traps located in Comox Harbour through zooarchaeological analysis of fish remains. Fish remains were identified and quantified to trace changes in resource use and linked to the chronology of fish trap use. Incorporating the theoretical frameworks of human behavioural ecology (optimal foraging models), intensification, household archaeology, and the archaeology of complex hunter-gatherers, this thesis discusses the use of fish traps in Comox Harbour in relation to larger questions of Northwest Coast social and economic complexity, in particular the emphasis on herring seen in the fish remains. / October 2008
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Cut mark analysis of protohistoric bison remains from EfPm-27 utilizing the scanning electron microscopePollio, Cara Jean 13 April 2009 (has links)
EfPm-27 is a Protohistoric bison pound and processing site located in Fish Creek Park in Calgary, Alberta. The site exhibited the presence of metal tools and macroscopically deceptive cut marks suggesting the potential for the presence of both metal and stone cut marks. Moulds of selected cut marks from the assemblage were made and examined with the scanning electron microscope (SEM) to verify or negate the use of metal tools for butchery at the site. SEM images of the cut mark moulds reveal micromorphology that is similar to experimental and published stone tool cut mark SEM images. No evidence for the use of metal tools for butchering was identified.
Protohistoric sites research could benefit from the use of SEM analysis of cut marks to distinguish between stone and metal tool use. This would provide important secondary evidence for metal trade items in scenarios where such artifacts may be beyond recovery. Conversely, the presence of metal artifacts at a site does not necessarily imply that they were used for butchery and this assertion must be verified by the presence of metal cut marks.
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Animal Husbandry at Tell el Hesi (Israel): Results from Zooarchaeological and Isotopic AnalysisPeck-Janssen, Shannon Marie 14 April 2006 (has links)
Located in today’s southern Israel, Tell el Hesi provides archaeologists with important clues to political and social changes in the ancient Near East. Zooarchaeological and stable isotopic analyses were conducted to evaluate shifts in animal husbandry practices during changing socioeconomic and sociopolitical conditions in the southern Levant.
During the Early Bronze Age, Tell el Hesi thrived as an agricultural grain producing center for the southern Levant. The acropolis served as both a storage and redistribution center for the inhabitants of Tell el Hesi. Coinciding with the collapse of the southern Levant, Tell el Hesi was abandoned throughout the Middle Bronze Age and Late Bronze Age. Socioeconomic relations collapsed between the southern and northern Levant as foreign cultures swept into the region. The Iron Age and Persian Period represented constant sociopolitical change as Assyrian and Persian armies battled against Egypt for territory and natural resources, using Tell el Hesi as a military outpost and storage facility for soldiers and equipment.
Unsystematic excavations at the site make it difficult to interpret how animals were used at Tell el Hesi over time. Zooarchaeological analysis suggests, however, that amidst constant societal changes at Tell el Hesi, the inhabitants of the site used animals in similar ways throughout time. Statistically, there seems to be little difference in the quantity of animal species represented during the Bronze Age, Iron Age, and Persian Period. This suggests that the once common specialized pastoralism found in the Early Bronze Age survived into the Persian Period at Tell el Hesi and was an effective herd management strategy for small populations living in ever changing societies. Future excavation and analysis would be able to further assess this hypothesis.
The stable isotope results suggest that domesticated animals at Tell el Hesi were consuming both C3 domesticated grain along with C4 wild grasses. Economically significant animals appear to have been foddered within the city boundaries of Tell el Hesi but predominantly grazed in the surrounding foothill area. Wild animals such as deer, gazelle and antelope share similar δ13C values with the domesticated animals at the site.
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A Spatial Analysis and Zooarchaeological Interpretation of Archaeological Bison Remains in the Southwest and the Wildlife Management Implications for the House Rock Valley Bison Herd in Grand Canyon National Park, ArizonaHuffer, Donelle Joy January 2013 (has links)
The historically introduced House Rock Valley bison herd has, in recent years, migrated from the eastern Arizona Strip onto the Kaibab Plateau within Grand Canyon National Park. Bison are considered a nonnative species to the southern Colorado Plateau, and the animals adversely impact sensitive ecosystems prompting National Park Service wildlife managers to pursue their removal. Archaeofaunal evidence of bison in the Grand Canyon and neighboring regions, however, raises concern that bison may in fact be native. Assessing the evidence within a zooarchaeological interpretive framework is critical since mere presence/absence lists of bison remains do not address the potentially complex cultural processes involved in the formation of archaeofaunal assemblages. Inter-assemblage comparisons illustrate a decline in relative abundance and skeletal completeness correlated to distance from traditionally understood historical bison distribution. If bison were present in the Southwest, as the evidence suggests, they likely entered the region only occasionally as small, dispersed herds.
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A view from the shore: interpreting fish trap use in Comox Harbour through zooarchaeological analysis of fish remains from the Q'umu?xs Village site (DkSf-19), Comox Harbour, British ColumbiaCaldwell, Megan 29 August 2008 (has links)
This thesis presents the results of recent sampling of the Q’umu?xs Village site (DkSf-19) at Comox Harbour, British Columbia. Bucket auger and column sampling was undertaken to ascertain resource use patterns associated with the unique abundance of wooden stake fish traps located in Comox Harbour through zooarchaeological analysis of fish remains. Fish remains were identified and quantified to trace changes in resource use and linked to the chronology of fish trap use. Incorporating the theoretical frameworks of human behavioural ecology (optimal foraging models), intensification, household archaeology, and the archaeology of complex hunter-gatherers, this thesis discusses the use of fish traps in Comox Harbour in relation to larger questions of Northwest Coast social and economic complexity, in particular the emphasis on herring seen in the fish remains.
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"In Search of Deer": A historical ecological perspective on caribou in northern Manitoba in the context of Cree useHebert, Laura Caroline 06 April 2015 (has links)
Caribou have a longstanding cultural and environmental role, and have interacted with human groups across time. This thesis is a consideration of these interactions, exploring prehistoric and historic patterns of caribou usage by Cree people in northern Manitoba. Through zooarchaeological analysis, an ethnohistorical review, and community workshops and interviews with York Factory First Nation, the relationship between caribou populations and Cree use is illustrated, providing insight into abundance, movements, and the socio-cultural value of caribou over time. In doing so, context is provided for the present-day situation: connections between historical and modern herds are drawn, population and migration changes are highlighted, and the impact of hunting pressures, climatic variation, habitat changes, and food availability on caribou populations are contemplated. Caribou have long been central to the seasonal economy in northern Manitoba, and the use of these animals reflects their abundance and value.
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A view from the shore: interpreting fish trap use in Comox Harbour through zooarchaeological analysis of fish remains from the Q'umu?xs Village site (DkSf-19), Comox Harbour, British ColumbiaCaldwell, Megan 29 August 2008 (has links)
This thesis presents the results of recent sampling of the Q’umu?xs Village site (DkSf-19) at Comox Harbour, British Columbia. Bucket auger and column sampling was undertaken to ascertain resource use patterns associated with the unique abundance of wooden stake fish traps located in Comox Harbour through zooarchaeological analysis of fish remains. Fish remains were identified and quantified to trace changes in resource use and linked to the chronology of fish trap use. Incorporating the theoretical frameworks of human behavioural ecology (optimal foraging models), intensification, household archaeology, and the archaeology of complex hunter-gatherers, this thesis discusses the use of fish traps in Comox Harbour in relation to larger questions of Northwest Coast social and economic complexity, in particular the emphasis on herring seen in the fish remains.
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