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Persistent Place-Making in the Ances...
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Holyoke, Kenneth Roy.
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Persistent Place-Making in the Ancestral Wabanaki Homeland: Washademoak Multi-coloured Chert and the Belyeas Cove Quarry.
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Persistent Place-Making in the Ancestral Wabanaki Homeland: Washademoak Multi-coloured Chert and the Belyeas Cove Quarry./
Author:
Holyoke, Kenneth Roy.
Published:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2023,
Description:
249 p.
Notes:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-05, Section: B.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International85-05B.
Subject:
Archaeology. -
Online resource:
https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=30639960
ISBN:
9798380834544
Persistent Place-Making in the Ancestral Wabanaki Homeland: Washademoak Multi-coloured Chert and the Belyeas Cove Quarry.
Holyoke, Kenneth Roy.
Persistent Place-Making in the Ancestral Wabanaki Homeland: Washademoak Multi-coloured Chert and the Belyeas Cove Quarry.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2023 - 249 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 85-05, Section: B.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Toronto (Canada), 2023.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
Lithic quarries are significant places for hunter-fisher-gatherers; they are persistent places which offer critical tools for survival, and their archaeology often speaks to millennia of human engagements with past landscapes. Despite this, much of quarry research has been framed through a positivist lens which de-emphasizes the ways in which stone mediates both social and economic relationships and plays important roles in the ritual lives of many groups. This thesis explores how lithic resources, and the bedrock sources for those resources, offer a space for understanding Ancestral Wabanaki place-making and how groups interacted with, and constructed their past landscapes. I focus on the known bedrock source for Washademoak Multi-coloured Chert (WMCC) at Belyeas Cove, Washademoak Lake, in the Lower Wolastoq region, New Brunswick, Canada. Using a dataset of 148 archaeological sites spanning from the Palaeoindian period through to the 18th century, I argue the procurement, preparation, distribution, and use-the circulation-of Washademoak Chert maps Ancestral Wabanaki relationships within the Maritime Peninsula and beyond. These data document trade patterns, ritual, domestic life, and the ways Wabanaki participated in and reconfigured wide-ranging cultural phenomena, particularly so during the Maritime Woodland period (3000-500 cal BP). Persistent place-making is built through mutually constituted relationships between people, their landscapes, and the things they create. The circulation of those things builds connections to, and between, places and can be thought of as a type of portable place-making. By tracking the distribution of WMCC through time and space, this research explores the relationship between past peoples and their landscapes-natural and social-how those relationships were mediated through materials like stone, and how actions like quarrying, preparing, and circulating or exchanging stone were part of persistent place-making at the Belyeas Cove quarry.
ISBN: 9798380834544Subjects--Topical Terms:
558412
Archaeology.
Subjects--Index Terms:
Hunter-fisher-gatherer
Persistent Place-Making in the Ancestral Wabanaki Homeland: Washademoak Multi-coloured Chert and the Belyeas Cove Quarry.
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Lithic quarries are significant places for hunter-fisher-gatherers; they are persistent places which offer critical tools for survival, and their archaeology often speaks to millennia of human engagements with past landscapes. Despite this, much of quarry research has been framed through a positivist lens which de-emphasizes the ways in which stone mediates both social and economic relationships and plays important roles in the ritual lives of many groups. This thesis explores how lithic resources, and the bedrock sources for those resources, offer a space for understanding Ancestral Wabanaki place-making and how groups interacted with, and constructed their past landscapes. I focus on the known bedrock source for Washademoak Multi-coloured Chert (WMCC) at Belyeas Cove, Washademoak Lake, in the Lower Wolastoq region, New Brunswick, Canada. Using a dataset of 148 archaeological sites spanning from the Palaeoindian period through to the 18th century, I argue the procurement, preparation, distribution, and use-the circulation-of Washademoak Chert maps Ancestral Wabanaki relationships within the Maritime Peninsula and beyond. These data document trade patterns, ritual, domestic life, and the ways Wabanaki participated in and reconfigured wide-ranging cultural phenomena, particularly so during the Maritime Woodland period (3000-500 cal BP). Persistent place-making is built through mutually constituted relationships between people, their landscapes, and the things they create. The circulation of those things builds connections to, and between, places and can be thought of as a type of portable place-making. By tracking the distribution of WMCC through time and space, this research explores the relationship between past peoples and their landscapes-natural and social-how those relationships were mediated through materials like stone, and how actions like quarrying, preparing, and circulating or exchanging stone were part of persistent place-making at the Belyeas Cove quarry.
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https://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=30639960
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