Of men and herds in barrenland prehistory
Bibliography: p. 300-317. This thesis represents an attempt at elucidating the temporal and spatial interrelationships between barrenland cultures, climates and caribou herds. Its core is in the form of a case study, that of the prehistoric interaction of the human hunting bands, climatic effects a...
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Format: | Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis |
Language: | English |
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University of Calgary
1974
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/1880/13186 https://doi.org/10.11575/PRISM/13495 |
Summary: | Bibliography: p. 300-317. This thesis represents an attempt at elucidating the temporal and spatial interrelationships between barrenland cultures, climates and caribou herds. Its core is in the form of a case study, that of the prehistoric interaction of the human hunting bands, climatic effects and caribou herd distributions in the Canadian barrenlands during the Arctic Small Tool tradition occupation after 1500 B.C. Following initial descriptions of barrenland geography, biology, geology, climatology and ethnology, site locations resulting from the hunter and prey relationship are ex-plored. Basic to this relationship and site locations are two primary suppositions. They are: (1) caribou herds are discrete, their separateness b.?se.d upon environment and behavior; and (2) the hunting soci.eties who prey upori. the caribou tend to be discrete due to their alignment with discrete herds. Three corollaries follow the suppositions: (1) band movements and human communication are usually confined to herd migration corridors and forage areas; (2) differing cultural patterns develop in the hunting societies within herd areas; and (3) artifacts are more homogeneous within herding areas and more heterogeneous between herding areas, primarily due to restricted lateral movement and communication. Because of their distribution, quantity, chronology and excellent diagnostic qualities, artifacts of the Arctic Small Tool tradition were used in testing the corollaries. The corollaries and suppositions comprise the discrete band/discrete herd relationship. |
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