Back to Search Start Over

Fremont Hunting and Resource Intensification in the Eastern Great Basin

Authors :
Joel C. Janetski
Source :
Journal of Archaeological Science. 24:1075-1088
Publication Year :
1997
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 1997.

Abstract

Empirical tests of resource-intensification models argue for diminishing foraging efficiency among hunter–gatherers in California over the past 2000 years (Basgall, 1987,Research in Economic Anthropology9,21–52; Broughton, 1994aJournal of Archaeological Science21,501–514; 1994bJournal of Anthropological Anthropology13, 371–401). The evidence for this long-term trajectory consists of decreases in the abundance of large, high-ranked prey in archaeofaunal assemblages. This paper presents faunal data from Fremont structural sites in the eastern Great Basin and Northern Colorado Plateau as an additional empirical test of resource intensification patterns and compares them to trends in California and the American Southwest. The measure of resource efficiency used is the artiodactyl index (following Broughton, 1994ab), a tool derived from prey choice models of optimal foraging. Faunal data from Fremont structural sites argue that (1) foraging efficiency declined during the Fremont period, and (2) this decline was due to population growth.

Details

ISSN :
03054403
Volume :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Archaeological Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cf291f91fcad872200b911dad106bb59