The organization of late Dorset lithic technology at the LdFa-1 site in southern Baffin Island, Nunavut

This study represents the first of its kind to examine an extensive lithic debitage assemblage from a Late Dorset inland occupation. The assemblage derives from an isolated Late Dorset component at the LdFa-1 site, located along the northwest shore of Mingo Lake in the deep interior of southern Baff...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Landry, David Bryce
Other Authors: Milne, Brooke (Anthropology), Szathmáry, Emőke (Anthropology) Park, Robert (University of Waterloo)
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/22166
Description
Summary:This study represents the first of its kind to examine an extensive lithic debitage assemblage from a Late Dorset inland occupation. The assemblage derives from an isolated Late Dorset component at the LdFa-1 site, located along the northwest shore of Mingo Lake in the deep interior of southern Baffin Island. A study sample of 7,479 lithic debitage is systematically drawn and analyzed using two methodological approaches: individual attribute analysis and mass analysis. Patterns of variability derived from the analysis are isolated and interpreted within a technological organizational framework to identify Late Dorset lithic reduction and use strategies at the site. Using a multi-scalar approach, these results are then compared to those obtained from two inland Pre-Dorset sites, known as Sandy Point (LlDv-10) and Mosquito Ridge (MaDv-11) to draw some conclusions about how Palaeo-Eskimo populations more broadly organized their lithic technologies and used this terrestrial landscape over time. October 2013