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Holes in Our Moccasins, Holes in Our Stories : Apachean Origins and the Promontory, Franktown, and Dismal River Archaeological Records

Ives, John W.(Edited by)Janetski, Joel C.(Edited by)
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From 1930 to 1931, Julian Steward recovered hundreds of well-worn moccasins, along with mittens, bison robe fragments, bows, arrows, pottery, bone and stone tools, cordage, gaming pieces, and abundant faunal remains, making Utah’s Promontory Caves site one of the most remarkable hunter-gatherer archaeological records in western North America.

Although Steward recognized that the moccasins and other artifacts were characteristic of the Canadian Subarctic and northern Plains and not the Great Basin, his findings languished for decades. This volume connects Steward’s work with results from new excavations in Promontory Caves 1 and 2 and illustrates that the early Promontory Phase resulted from an intrusive large-game hunting population very different from nearby late Fremont communities.

Lingering for just one or two human generations, the cave occupants began to accept people as well as material and symbolic culture from surrounding thirteenth-century neighbors.

Volume contributors employ a transdisciplinary approach to evaluate the possibility that the Promontory Phase materials reflect the presence of Apachean ancestors.

In these records lies the seeds for the intensive Plains-Puebloan interactions of the centuries that followed.

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Product Details
1647690668 / 9781647690663
Hardback
30/09/2022
United States
English
384 pages
28 cm