The Architecture of Hunting The Built Environment of Hunter-Gatherers and Its Impact on Mobility, Property, Leadership, and Labor.

"Combining underwater archaeology, terrestrial archaeology, and ethnographic and historical research, The Architecture of Hunting investigates the creation and use of hunting architecture by hunter-gatherers. Hunting architecture -- including blinds, drive lanes, and fishing weirs -- is a globa...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lemke, Ashley
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: New York : Texas A&M University Press, 2022.
Series:Peopling of the Americas Publications.
Subjects:
Online Access:Click for online access
Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Contents
  • List of Illustrations
  • Figure 2.1. The Sayarim Kite
  • Figure 2.2. Aerial view of the Pitam Kite, looking west.
  • Figure 2.3. Funnel- shaped game drives in Tibet
  • Figure 2.4. Hunting blind in Tibetan antelope wintering grounds
  • Figure 2.5. Locations of dzaekha traps
  • Figure 2.6. Ancient remains of a trap for chaccu
  • Figure 2.7. Apparent drive structures in Chile
  • Figure 2.8. Start of the Gran Chaccu
  • Figure 2.9. Guide map of the Gran Chaccu
  • Figure 2.10. The Kutoyis Complex, Blackfeet Indian Reservation, Montana
  • Figure 2.11. Pronghorn hunting architecture sites labeled north of Matlin, Box Elder County, Utah
  • Figure 2.12. Aerial view of the Barnett pronghorn hunting site in Canada
  • Figure 2.13. Oblique aerial view of the Barnett pronghorn hunting site,
  • Figure 2.14. Oblique aerial view of the Barnett pronghorn hunting site looking northeast
  • Figure 2.15. Drive lane and hunting blind at the Olson site
  • Figure 2.16. Deer trap on Rum in Scotland
  • Figure 2.17. Deer trap on Rum with the surrounding landscape
  • Figure 2.18. Schematic of caribou drive lane features
  • Figure 2.19. Rock art depiction of reindeer hunting corral near Alta, Norway
  • Figure 2.20. Engraving of Rangifer hunting architecture on walrus tusk pipe, Kotzebue Sound, Alaska
  • Figure 2.21. Map of Tulugak Lake, Alaska, showing the microregional layout of Nunamiut settlements, caribou hunting architecture, and caribou migration trails (Binford 1978b:206
  • Binford 2012: 206).
  • Figure 2.22a- d. Rock art depicting camelids in a drive lane and corral hunting structure in Peru (Hostnig 2011, figs. 8-9, 10b, 11).
  • Figure 2.23. Rock art depicting bighorn sheep trap. Photograph taken by Dell Crandall of Moab, Utah. Used by permission of Peter Faris and https:// rockartblog.blogspot.com.
  • Figure 3.1. Barren- ground (left) and woodland (right) caribou antlers to scale (scale bar is 20 cm). Zoological specimens 63246 and 124573 from the University of Michigan, Museum of Zoology, Ann Arbor (see also Lemke 2015b:280, fig. 4).
  • Figure 3.2. Ethnographic groups listed in table 3.3.
  • Figure 3.3. A communal caribou drive at an artificial crossing, drawn by Inuit artist Talirurnilik (Saladin D'Anglure and Vézinet 1977).
  • Figure 3.4. Primary North American Paleoindian caribou hunting sites mentioned in the text.
  • Figure 4.1. The Lake Stanley stage and the AAR. Blue areas indicate ancient water levels
  • white areas are dry land
  • solid lines indicate the modern outlines of the state of Michigan and Lakes Michigan (to the west) and Huron (to the east). The line with two arrows indicates the AAR.
  • Figure 4.2. Lake Algonquin.