Shellfish Harvest on the Coast of British Columbia: The Archaeology of Settlement and Subsistence through High-resolution Stable Isotope Analysis and Sclerochronology

In many interpretations of hunter-gatherer settlement systems, archaeologists have assumed implicitly or explicitly that a pattern of mobilitybased on seasonally-scheduled movements between different site locations waspracticed. This pattern of mobility is often characterized as a seasonal round, wh...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Burchell, Meghan
Other Authors: Cannon, Aubrey, Schwarcz, Henry, Anthropology
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12921
id ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/12921
record_format openpolar
spelling ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/12921 2023-05-15T18:39:29+02:00 Shellfish Harvest on the Coast of British Columbia: The Archaeology of Settlement and Subsistence through High-resolution Stable Isotope Analysis and Sclerochronology Burchell, Meghan Cannon, Aubrey Schwarcz, Henry Anthropology 2013-04-22 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12921 unknown opendissertations/7766 8825 4051487 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12921 Archaeology Sclerochronology Stable Isotopes: Hunter-Gatherers Seasonality British Columbia Archaeological Anthropology Biogeochemistry Earth Sciences Other Anthropology Other Earth Sciences dissertation 2013 ftmcmaster 2022-03-22T21:11:39Z In many interpretations of hunter-gatherer settlement systems, archaeologists have assumed implicitly or explicitly that a pattern of mobilitybased on seasonally-scheduled movements between different site locations waspracticed. This pattern of mobility is often characterized as a seasonal round, where different locations are used during specific times of the year for different purposes. An implication of this pattern of mobility is that short-term occupation sites are visited annually, approximately at the same time each year and longer-term residential sites can span multiple seasons. To interpret seasonality, indirect indicators are often used but the high-resolution methods presented in this study provide direct evidence of seasonal site occupation. The Pacific Northwest Coast provides an ideal landscape to examine seasonality since many of the staple resources, particularly salmon, were available on a seasonal basis. Contrary to longstanding assumptions of regular seasonal movement between sites, the analysis of shell samples from multiple archaeological sites from distinct regions in British Columbia show complex patterns of multi-seasonal occupation at smaller campsites and specific seasonal or multi-seasonal emphasis in occupation and/or shellfish harvest at longer-term residential sites. To identify patterns of shellfish harvest, stable oxygen isotope analysis and high-resolution sclerochronology were applied to the bivalve Saxidomus gigantea (butter clam). Combined with shell growth increment analysis to examine relative levels of harvest pressure, local rates of shellfish collecting are also interpreted. To examine regional variability in seasonality and resource use in British Columbia, three environmentally and historically distinct areas were selected spanning approximately 6000 years of history. These regions include the central coast in the tradition territory of the Heiltsuk, and two areas on the northern coast, specifically the Dundas Islands Group and Prince Rupert Harbour in the traditional territory of the Tsimshian. The results of the analysis show site-specific trends in shellfish harvesting on the central coast; a pattern which is not as clear on the northern coast. Sites on the Dundas Islands show multi-seasonal collection and a stronger emphasis on winter shellfish harvesting. The results also show that shellfish were harvested more intensively in the Dundas Islands area relative to the central coast. The pattern of seasonal shellfish harvesting on the mainland coast at village sites in Prince Rupert Harbour is similar to the pattern found at long-term residential sites on the central coast. With respect to the dietary importance of clams, another longstanding issue in Northwest Coast archaeology, the results show a mix of patterns including casual resource use at most campsites, intensive multi-season harvest in some regions and strategic multi-season harvest and spring consumption at some residential sites. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Tsimshian Tsimshian* MacSphere (McMaster University) Pacific Rupert ENVELOPE(-134.187,-134.187,59.599,59.599) Prince Rupert ENVELOPE(-130.297,-130.297,54.290,54.290) Prince Rupert Harbour ENVELOPE(-130.338,-130.338,54.320,54.320) Dundas Islands ENVELOPE(-130.875,-130.875,54.563,54.563)
institution Open Polar
collection MacSphere (McMaster University)
op_collection_id ftmcmaster
language unknown
topic Archaeology
Sclerochronology
Stable Isotopes: Hunter-Gatherers
Seasonality
British Columbia
Archaeological Anthropology
Biogeochemistry
Earth Sciences
Other Anthropology
Other Earth Sciences
spellingShingle Archaeology
Sclerochronology
Stable Isotopes: Hunter-Gatherers
Seasonality
British Columbia
Archaeological Anthropology
Biogeochemistry
Earth Sciences
Other Anthropology
Other Earth Sciences
Burchell, Meghan
Shellfish Harvest on the Coast of British Columbia: The Archaeology of Settlement and Subsistence through High-resolution Stable Isotope Analysis and Sclerochronology
topic_facet Archaeology
Sclerochronology
Stable Isotopes: Hunter-Gatherers
Seasonality
British Columbia
Archaeological Anthropology
Biogeochemistry
Earth Sciences
Other Anthropology
Other Earth Sciences
description In many interpretations of hunter-gatherer settlement systems, archaeologists have assumed implicitly or explicitly that a pattern of mobilitybased on seasonally-scheduled movements between different site locations waspracticed. This pattern of mobility is often characterized as a seasonal round, where different locations are used during specific times of the year for different purposes. An implication of this pattern of mobility is that short-term occupation sites are visited annually, approximately at the same time each year and longer-term residential sites can span multiple seasons. To interpret seasonality, indirect indicators are often used but the high-resolution methods presented in this study provide direct evidence of seasonal site occupation. The Pacific Northwest Coast provides an ideal landscape to examine seasonality since many of the staple resources, particularly salmon, were available on a seasonal basis. Contrary to longstanding assumptions of regular seasonal movement between sites, the analysis of shell samples from multiple archaeological sites from distinct regions in British Columbia show complex patterns of multi-seasonal occupation at smaller campsites and specific seasonal or multi-seasonal emphasis in occupation and/or shellfish harvest at longer-term residential sites. To identify patterns of shellfish harvest, stable oxygen isotope analysis and high-resolution sclerochronology were applied to the bivalve Saxidomus gigantea (butter clam). Combined with shell growth increment analysis to examine relative levels of harvest pressure, local rates of shellfish collecting are also interpreted. To examine regional variability in seasonality and resource use in British Columbia, three environmentally and historically distinct areas were selected spanning approximately 6000 years of history. These regions include the central coast in the tradition territory of the Heiltsuk, and two areas on the northern coast, specifically the Dundas Islands Group and Prince Rupert Harbour in the traditional territory of the Tsimshian. The results of the analysis show site-specific trends in shellfish harvesting on the central coast; a pattern which is not as clear on the northern coast. Sites on the Dundas Islands show multi-seasonal collection and a stronger emphasis on winter shellfish harvesting. The results also show that shellfish were harvested more intensively in the Dundas Islands area relative to the central coast. The pattern of seasonal shellfish harvesting on the mainland coast at village sites in Prince Rupert Harbour is similar to the pattern found at long-term residential sites on the central coast. With respect to the dietary importance of clams, another longstanding issue in Northwest Coast archaeology, the results show a mix of patterns including casual resource use at most campsites, intensive multi-season harvest in some regions and strategic multi-season harvest and spring consumption at some residential sites. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
author2 Cannon, Aubrey
Schwarcz, Henry
Anthropology
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Burchell, Meghan
author_facet Burchell, Meghan
author_sort Burchell, Meghan
title Shellfish Harvest on the Coast of British Columbia: The Archaeology of Settlement and Subsistence through High-resolution Stable Isotope Analysis and Sclerochronology
title_short Shellfish Harvest on the Coast of British Columbia: The Archaeology of Settlement and Subsistence through High-resolution Stable Isotope Analysis and Sclerochronology
title_full Shellfish Harvest on the Coast of British Columbia: The Archaeology of Settlement and Subsistence through High-resolution Stable Isotope Analysis and Sclerochronology
title_fullStr Shellfish Harvest on the Coast of British Columbia: The Archaeology of Settlement and Subsistence through High-resolution Stable Isotope Analysis and Sclerochronology
title_full_unstemmed Shellfish Harvest on the Coast of British Columbia: The Archaeology of Settlement and Subsistence through High-resolution Stable Isotope Analysis and Sclerochronology
title_sort shellfish harvest on the coast of british columbia: the archaeology of settlement and subsistence through high-resolution stable isotope analysis and sclerochronology
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12921
long_lat ENVELOPE(-134.187,-134.187,59.599,59.599)
ENVELOPE(-130.297,-130.297,54.290,54.290)
ENVELOPE(-130.338,-130.338,54.320,54.320)
ENVELOPE(-130.875,-130.875,54.563,54.563)
geographic Pacific
Rupert
Prince Rupert
Prince Rupert Harbour
Dundas Islands
geographic_facet Pacific
Rupert
Prince Rupert
Prince Rupert Harbour
Dundas Islands
genre Tsimshian
Tsimshian*
genre_facet Tsimshian
Tsimshian*
op_relation opendissertations/7766
8825
4051487
http://hdl.handle.net/11375/12921
_version_ 1766228407871340544