The Archaeology of the North American Great Plains
This book uses archaeology to tell 15,000 years of history of the indigenous people of the North American Great Plains.
Douglas B. Bamforth (Author)
9780521873468, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 23 September 2021
350 pages
26 x 18.5 x 2.6 cm, 1.11 kg
'… a comprehensive study of the region's archaeology … Recommended' L. L. Johnson, Choice Connect
In this volume, Douglas B. Bamforth offers an archaeological overview of the Great Plains, the vast, open grassland bordered by forests and mountain ranges situated in the heart of North America. Synthesizing a century of scholarship and new archaeological evidence, he focuses on changes in resource use, continental trade connections, social formations, and warfare over a period of 15,000 years. Bamforth investigates how foragers harvested the grasslands more intensively over time, ultimately turning to maize farming, and examines the persistence of industrial mobile bison hunters in much of the region as farmers lived in communities ranging from hamlets to towns with thousands of occupants. He also explores how social groups formed and changed, migrations of peoples in and out of the Plains, and the conflicts that occurred over time and space. Significantly, Bamforth's volume demonstrates how archaeology can be used as the basis for telling long-term, problem-oriented human history.
1. Introduction2.Where and what are the Great Plains?3. Peopling the continent, peopling the Plains: pre-Clovis to 10,800 B.C4. Paleoindian hunters (and gatherers): 10,800 to 6900 B.C.5. Diversity, environmental changeand external connection: the Plains Archaic, 6900 to 600 B.C.6. Mounds, pots, pipes, and bison: the Plains Woodland Period, 600 B.C. to A.D. 9507. The context of maize farming on the Great Plains8. Settled farmers and their neighbors, Part I: the early Plains Village period, A.D. 950 to 12509. Settled farmers and their neighbors continued: the Plains Village Period Part II: A.D. 1250 to 140010. The Plains Village Period, Part III: fifteenth century transformations11. One promise kept: the Colonial Era, A.D. 1500 to the twentieth century12. Afterward.
Subject Areas: Prehistoric archaeology [HDDA], History of the Americas [HBJK]