Investigating Late Prehistory in the Landscapes of Douglas Lake, Michigan

调查密歇根州道格拉斯湖景观中的史前晚期

基本信息

  • 批准号:
    0851096
  • 负责人:
  • 金额:
    $ 18.26万
  • 依托单位:
  • 依托单位国家:
    美国
  • 项目类别:
    Standard Grant
  • 财政年份:
    2009
  • 资助国家:
    美国
  • 起止时间:
    2009-01-01 至 2013-12-31
  • 项目状态:
    已结题

项目摘要

With National Science Foundation support, Dr. Meghan Howey and a team of specialists, students, and citizen scientists will conduct two field seasons of research on Late Prehistoric (AD 1200-1600) Native American occupation around Douglas Lake in Northern Michigan. The Cultural Landscapes of Douglas Lake Archaeological Research Program represents the first professional archaeology at Douglas Lake and is a joint effort between the University of New Hampshire and the University of Michigan Biological Station (UMBS). For millennia, communities in Northern Michigan moved easily between resource zones. The adoption of maize horticulture after AD 1200 along the coasts of the Great Lakes changed this - the new farmers settled into more permanent villages and established exclusive coastal territories. Foragers, now limited to the interior, had to form new strategies for interacting with their coastal neighbors. Pilot research on Douglas Lake suggests that local Late Prehistoric hunter-gatherers developed an intensive occupation of this inland area. They generated surplus from local resources, intensified storage, developed multi-season occupations with substantial structures, and emphasized local community without engaging in extensive interaction with the coasts. This was a very different strategy than the one chosen by forager communities around other inland lakes south of Douglas. Here, foragers engaged in formal interactions with coastal communities, constructing large ceremonial monuments for inter-societal ritual and trade, thereby securing access to coastal staple goods. The research combines survey, excavation, remote sensing, radiometric dating, and material analyses to assess definitively whether the inland foragers of Douglas Lake did indeed have a distinctive interaction pattern with coastal horticulturalists. The project will contribute substantially to our knowledge of the ways foragers and farmers relate, a topic of longstanding interest to anthropologists. By evaluating whether during Late Prehistory in Northern Michigan foragers made radically different choices about their interactions with horticultural neighbors, this research will provide a unique perspective on the diverse trajectories forager/farmer interaction can follow. Illuminating the ways hunter-gatherers living in similar environmental settings can chose very different strategies for negotiating changing sociopolitical conditions will challenge the generally held view that the environment was the only factor that shaped "small-scale" societies. There may, in fact, have been many reasons Late Prehistoric inland foragers made different choices -- political, social, religious, economic, and ecological. This research program opens the door for teasing apart how, when and why these multiple reasons are put to use by hunter-gatherers in dynamic regional settings. The project has a real commitment to its broader impact in the world. Having grown from field schools, undergraduate education is paramount - students are involved first-hand in all aspects of the research. Public involvement also is vital to the program. As with the earlier research, findings will be shared with the public through a blog and UMBS Camp Stewards (volunteer citizen scientists) will continue to be key research participants. Collaboration with stakeholders, notably local/regional Native American communities, is key to the work's success. Avenues of collaboration include routine consultation with local tribal elders, inclusion of tribal students in field work, and plans for a seminar at UMBS about non-destructive archaeological methods for interested tribal members.
在国家科学基金会的支持下,Meghan Howey博士和一个由专家,学生和公民科学家组成的团队将在密歇根州北方的道格拉斯湖周围对史前晚期(公元1200-1600年)美洲原住民的占领进行两个实地调查。 道格拉斯湖考古研究计划的文化景观代表了道格拉斯湖的第一个专业考古学,是新罕布什尔州大学和密歇根大学生物站(UMBS)之间的共同努力。 几千年来,密歇根州北方的社区在资源区之间很容易迁移。公元1200年后,沿着五大湖海岸种植玉米改变了这一状况--新的农民定居在更永久的村庄里,建立了专属的沿海领土。 觅食者,现在仅限于内陆,必须形成新的策略与沿海邻居互动。 对道格拉斯湖的初步研究表明,当地的史前晚期狩猎采集者对这一内陆地区进行了密集的占领。他们从当地资源中产生盈余,加强储存,开发具有实质性结构的多季节职业,并强调当地社区,而不与海岸进行广泛的互动。 这与道格拉斯以南其他内陆湖泊周围的觅食群落选择的策略截然不同。 在这里,采集者与沿海社区进行正式的互动,为社会间的仪式和贸易建造大型仪式纪念碑,从而确保获得沿海主食。 这项研究结合了调查、挖掘、遥感、放射性测年和材料分析,以明确评估道格拉斯湖的内陆觅食者是否确实与沿海园艺家有着独特的互动模式。 该项目将大大有助于我们对采集者和农民关系的方式的了解,这是人类学家长期感兴趣的一个话题。 通过评估是否在史前晚期在密歇根州北方觅食者作出了根本不同的选择,他们与园艺邻居的互动,这项研究将提供一个独特的视角觅食者/农民的互动可以遵循的不同轨迹。 阐明生活在类似环境中的狩猎采集者如何选择非常不同的策略来谈判不断变化的社会政治条件,将挑战人们普遍持有的观点,即环境是塑造“小规模”社会的唯一因素。 事实上,史前晚期的内陆觅食者做出不同选择的原因可能有很多--政治、社会、宗教、经济和生态。 这项研究计划打开了一扇大门,让我们来梳理狩猎采集者在动态区域环境中如何、何时以及为什么使用这些多重原因。 该项目有一个真实的承诺,其在世界上更广泛的影响。 从实地学校成长起来,本科教育是最重要的-学生参与研究的各个方面的第一手资料。 公众参与对该计划也至关重要。 与早期的研究一样,研究结果将通过博客与公众分享,UMBS营地管理员(志愿公民科学家)将继续成为主要的研究参与者。 与利益攸关方,特别是当地/区域美洲原住民社区的合作,是这项工作取得成功的关键。 合作的途径包括与当地部落长老进行例行磋商,让部落学生参加实地工作,以及计划在UMBS为感兴趣的部落成员举办一次关于非破坏性考古方法的研讨会。

项目成果

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Meghan Howey其他文献

emJAA/em and Archaeology: A forty year odyssey
  • DOI:
    10.1016/j.jaa.2022.101419
  • 发表时间:
    2022-06-01
  • 期刊:
  • 影响因子:
    2.200
  • 作者:
    Meghan Howey;M. Anne Katzenberg;George R. Milner;John O'Shea;Robert Whallon
  • 通讯作者:
    Robert Whallon
To address the Anthropocene, engage the liberal arts
  • DOI:
    10.1016/j.ancene.2017.06.002
  • 发表时间:
    2017-06-01
  • 期刊:
  • 影响因子:
  • 作者:
    Heidi Bostic;Meghan Howey
  • 通讯作者:
    Meghan Howey

Meghan Howey的其他文献

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{{ truncateString('Meghan Howey', 18)}}的其他基金

The Utilization of LiDAR to Detect Small Scale Archaeological Features
利用激光雷达探测小规模考古特征
  • 批准号:
    1659000
  • 财政年份:
    2017
  • 资助金额:
    $ 18.26万
  • 项目类别:
    Standard Grant
Collaborative Research: Long-term Anthropogenic Influences on the Crater Lake Environmental Landscape of Western Uganda
合作研究:长期人为影响乌干达西部火山口湖环境景观
  • 批准号:
    1238373
  • 财政年份:
    2012
  • 资助金额:
    $ 18.26万
  • 项目类别:
    Standard Grant

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