PLANT RESOURCES IN GREAT BASIN HIGH ALTITUDE FORAGING
Author(s): David Rhode
Year: 2015
Summary
Prehistoric high altitude occupation sites in the White Mountains and Toquima Range contain archaeobotanical assemblages that inform on the use of plant resources both alpine in origin and imported from lower altitudes. Plant assemblages from the two areas show many similarities in the range of plant resources represented, as well as evident differences that reflect variable modes of high altitude living across the Great Basin. This presentation compares the plant materials from the White Mountains and Toquima Range and considers how plant resources fit into high-altitude foraging patterns.
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Cite this Record
PLANT RESOURCES IN GREAT BASIN HIGH ALTITUDE FORAGING. David Rhode. Presented at The 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Francisco, California. 2015 ( tDAR id: 395976)
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Keywords
General
archaeobotany
•
Great Basin
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High Altitude
Geographic Keywords
North America - Great Basin
Spatial Coverage
min long: -122.761; min lat: 29.917 ; max long: -109.27; max lat: 42.553 ;