Western Stemmed Tradition Lithic Procurement Strategies at the Catnip Creek Delta, Locality, Guano Valley, Oregon: A Gravity Model Approach
Author(s): Derek Reaux
Year: 2021
Summary
This is an abstract from the "Far West Paleoindian Archaeology: Papers from the Next Generation" session, at the 86th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.
Source provenance analyses have long featured prominently in Great Basin Paleoindian archaeology. Such research has primarily focused on reconstructing Paleoindian settlement/subsistence strategies, territoriality, and socioeconomic interactions by sourcing obsidian artifacts from sites and mapping their geographic distributions. While these studies have identified the toolstone sources that early groups used and how they may have conveyed them, few have explicitly addressed why particular materials may have been selected. I present a gravity model that examines the influence of geologic and geographic factors (e.g., toolstone quality and abundance) on Western Stemmed Tradition lithic procurement strategies at the Catnip Creek Delta Locality, Guano Valley, Oregon. My results suggest that groups primarily procured toolstone based on its proximity to wetlands and travel corridors and not sources’ overall quality. Paleoindians may have done this to maximize foraging efficiency within a wetland focused and residentially mobile settlement-subsistence system.
Cite this Record
Western Stemmed Tradition Lithic Procurement Strategies at the Catnip Creek Delta, Locality, Guano Valley, Oregon: A Gravity Model Approach. Derek Reaux. Presented at The 86th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. 2021 ( tDAR id: 466901)
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Keywords
Geographic Keywords
North America: California and Great Basin
Spatial Coverage
min long: -124.189; min lat: 31.803 ; max long: -105.469; max lat: 43.58 ;
Record Identifiers
Abstract Id(s): 32258