

Big game was also drawn to the canyons during the winter months for warmth and available forage and would have been available for the take. It's gravel bars furnished agate and chalcedony stones suitable for tool manufacture. The river, itself, provided a source of water, multiple runs of salmon that were caught and preserved for food, beds of clams that were exposed in low water times when other fresh game may have been scarce, harvest-able plant resources and crops of berries and greens. Marmots and other rodents come out of their dens on sunny days during the winter months. The greasewood-sage plains and the rock talus slopes were home to an abundance of small game that due to the winter warmth were never in complete hibernation. Driftwood and what trees there were, provided tool materials, firewood and shelter components. It's canyons provided warm southern exposures and well drained areas suitable for home construction. The Snake River was an oasis in the desert for the native peoples of the area. There is literally not a single place where humanity has not placed it's foot. 1991.If the human footprint could somehow be recorded, one would find that the surface of the Snake River Plain would be covered in a solid carpet of those foot prints.

Waverly Plantation: ethnoarchaeology of a tenant farming community.Washington, D.C.: National Technical Information Service. Silcott, Washington: ethnoarchaeology of a rural American community.Pullman: Laboratory of Anthropology, Washington State University.

Northwest Anthropological Research Notes 9 (1): 156-65. Archaeology of the recent past: Silcott, Washington, 1900-1930. An ethnoarchaeological study of a rural American community: Silcott, Washington, 1900-1930. The Uruk countryside.Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Heartland of cities.Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Land behind Baghdad.Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
#A tale in the desert knapping manual
Manual for a technological approach to ground stone analysis.Tucson: Center for Desert Archaeology. Toward understanding the technological development of manos and metates. ar/ nam/ spac/ Hopi/ Southwest/ Walpi/ anal Adams, J.L. The architectural analogue to Hopi social organization and room use, and implications for prehistoric northern Southwestern culture. ea/ nam/ setl/ Alaska/ Arctic Adams, E.C. Ethnoarchaeological interpretations of territoriality and land use in southwestern Alaska. In Ethnohistory of southwestern Alaska and the southern Yukon: method and content, M. Archaeoethnology, ethnoarchaeology and the problems of past cultural patterning. ea/ saf/ metl/ iron/ smelting/ Zaire Ackerman, R.E. Journal of Archaeological Science 26: 1135-43. A study of iron smelting at Lopanzo, Equateur province, Zaïre. ea/ naf/ ideo/ Egypt Ackerman, K.J., D.J. Leiden/Cairo: Research School of Asian, African, and Amerindian Studies, Universiteit Leiden/Nederlands-Vlaams Instituut. In Moving matters: ethnoarchaeology in the Near East (Proceedings of the International Seminar held at Cairo 7-10 December 1998), W. Isis and al-Sayyida Zaynab: links to Ancient Egypt. ex/ mam/ prod/ Honduras/ specialization Abu Zahra, N. Journal of New World Archaeology 6 (2): 39-48. Replicative experimentation at Copan, Honduras: implications for ancient economic specialization. ar/ nam/ styl/ Southwest/ Pueblo Abrams, E. In Reconstructing prehistoric Pueblo societies, W.A. Comments on Longacre's "Reconstructing prehistoric Pueblo societies". ETHNOARCHAEOLOGY BIBLIOGRAPHY Nicholas David 04/10/22 Aberle, D.F.
