Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-g7gxr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-15T21:35:19.532Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Form and Function of Bipolar Lithic Artifacts from the Three Dog Site, San Salvador, Bahamas

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Mary Jane Berman
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, NC 27109
April K. Sievert
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405
Thomas R. Whyte
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Appalachian State University, Boone, NC 28608

Abstract

The significance of a microlithic assemblage composed of imported, nonlocal materials is discussed for the Three Dog site, an early Lucayan site located on San Salvador, Bahamas. The Bahama archipelago is an interesting area in which to examine the organization of technology because the islands lack cherts and other suitable materials for chipped stone manufacture, suggesting that economizing strategies may have been practiced. The artifacts were manufactured by bipolar production and a few show evidence of recycling and reuse. Microwear analysis, undertaken to determine function, was inconclusive due to heavy weathering from the depositional environment. Traces of an organic adhesive suggest that some of the objects were used as hafted or composite tools. The presence of starch grains, most likely Xanthosoma sp., and other plant residues on some artifacts suggests they were used in plant processing. The morphological similarities of the flakes produced through bipolar reduction with those from ethnographic sources suggest that most of them probably were used as grater chips to process root or tuber foods. The assemblage was compared to other bipolarly-produced microlithic assemblages from nearby islands.

Resumen

Resumen

Este artículo trata de la importancia de la presencia de un conjunto microlítico compuesto de materiales importados en el sitio Three Dog, un sitio Lucayo temprano localizado en San Salvador, Bahamas. Las Bahamas es un área interesante para el estudio de la organización de la tecnología ya que las islas carecen de silex u otros materiales apropriados para la manufactura de piedra tallada. Numerosas evidencias de medidas de economizar inducidas por la escasez del material, tales como la técnica bipolar y el reuso y reciclaje de los artefactos, estan presente en el conjunto. Se llevó a cabo un análisis de microdesgastes para determinar el uso de los artefactos. El marcado deterioro de los artefactos líticos producidos por las pobres condiciones de deposición hace difícil la identificación de los patrones de lustre. Las semejanzas morfológicas entre las lascas producidas por la reducción bipolar y las descritas en las fuentes etnográficas sugieren que muchas de ellas fueron usadas como microlascas de ralladores de tubérculos. Tanto la función y el uso anticipado como la falta de buenas fuentes de lítica son consideraciones importantes en la determinación de la forma y la tecnología de artefactos.

Type
Reports
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 1999

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

References Cited

Acuña, V. J. 1985 Artefactos microlíticos de Turrialba relacionades con procesamiento de tubérculos. Vinculos 11(1–2):3145.Google Scholar
Ahler, S. J. 1989 Experimental Knapping with KRF and Midcontinental Cherts. Overview and Applications. In Experiments in Lithic Technology, edited by D.S. Amick and R.P. Mauldin, pp. 199234. BAR International Series 528. British Archaeological Reports, Oxford.Google Scholar
Aldenderfer, M. S., Kimball, L. R., and Sievert, A. 1989 Microwear Analysis in the Maya Lowlands. The Use of Functional Data in a Complex Society Setting. Journal of Field Archaeology 16:4760.Google Scholar
Andrefsky, W. Jr. 1994 Raw-Material Availability and The Organization of Technology. American Antiquity 59:2134.Google Scholar
Bamforth, D. 1986 Technological Efficiency and Tool Curation. American Antiquity 51:3850.Google Scholar
Bartone, R. N., and Crock, J. C. 1991 Rake Stone Industries at the Early Saladoid Trants Site, Montserrat, West Indies. In Proceedings of the Fourteenth Congress of the International Association for Caribbean Archaeology, edited by A. Cummins and P. King, pp. 124146. Barbados Museum and Historical Society, Bridgetown, Barbados.Google Scholar
Berman, M. J. 1995 A Chert Microlithic Assemblage from an Early Lucayan Site, San Salvador, Bahamas. In Proceedings of the XVth International Congress for Caribbean Archaeology, edited by R. E. Alegría and M. Rodríguez, pp. 111119. Centra de Estudios Avanzados de Puerto Rico y el Caribe, San Juan, Puerto Rico.Google Scholar
Berman, M. J., and Gnivecki, P. L. 1995 The Colonization of the Bahama Archipelago. World Archaeology 26:423441.Google Scholar
Berman, M. J., and Gnivecki, P. L. 1999 The Spatial Structure of the Three Dog Site. Manuscript on file, Department of Anthropology, Wake Forest University, Winston Salem, North Carolina.Google Scholar
Berman, M.J., and Pearsall, D. M. 1999 Plant Use at the Three Dog Site, an Early Lucayan Site on San Salvador Island, The Bahamas. Manuscript on file, Department of Anthropology, Wake Forest University, Winston Salem, North Carolina.Google Scholar
Carew, J., and Mylroie, J. E. 1995 Geology of the Bahamas. Bahamas Journal of Science 2(3):216.Google Scholar
Carlson, B. 1993 Strings of Command: Manufacture and Utilization of Shell Beads among the Taíno. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Carlson, L. A. 1995 Strings of Command: Manufacture and Utilization of Shell Beads among the Taíno. In Proceedings of the XVth International Congress for Caribbean Archaeology, edited by R. E. Alegría and M. Rodríguez, pp. 209218. Centra de Estudios Avanzados de Puerto Rico y el Caribe, San Juan, Puerto Rico.Google Scholar
Chernela, J. M. 1992 Social Meaning and Material Transaction: the Wanano-Tukano of Brazil and Colombia. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 11:111124.Google Scholar
Clark, J. 1987 Politics, Prismatic Blades, and Mesoamerican Civilization. In The Organization of Core Technology, edited by J. K. Johnson and C. A. Morrow, pp. 259284. Westview Press, Boulder.Google Scholar
Close, A.E. 1996 Carry That Weight: The Use and Transportation of Stone Tools. Current Anthropology 37:545553.Google Scholar
Crock, J. G., and Bartone, R. N. 1998 Archaeology of Trants, Montserrat: Part 4 . Flaked Stone and Stone Bead Industries. Annals of the Carnegie Museum 67(3):197234.Google Scholar
Dacal Moure, R. and Rivero de la Calle, M. 1996 Art and Archaeology of Pre-Columbian Cuba. University of Pittsburgh Press, Pittsburgh.Google Scholar
DeBoer, W. R. 1975 The Archaeological Evidence for Manioc Cultivation: A Cautionary Note. American Antiquity 40:419433.Google Scholar
De Booy, T. 1912 Lucayan Remains in the Caicos Islands. American Anthropologist 14:81105.Google Scholar
Draper, G., and Barros, J. A. 1994 Cuba. In Caribbean Geology: An Introduction, edited by S. K. Donovan and T. A. Jackson, pp. 6586. U.W.I. Publisher’s Association/University of the West Indies Press, Kingston, Jamaica.Google Scholar
Draper, G., Mann, P., and Lewis, J. F. 1994 Hispaniola. In Caribbean Geology: An Introduction, edited by S. K. Donovan and T. A. Jackson, pp. 129150. U.W.I. Publisher’s Association/University of the West Indies Press, Kingston, Jamaica.Google Scholar
Dunn, O., and Kelley, J. E. Jr. 1989 The Diario of Christopher Columbus’s First Voyage to America 1492–1493, abstracted by Fray Bartholomé de las Casas. University of Oklahoma Press, Norman.Google Scholar
Febles, J. D. 1988 Manual para el estudio de la piedra tallada de los aborígines de Cuba. Editorial Academia, La Habana.Google Scholar
Febles, J. D. 1991a Nuevos sitios arqueológicos del complejo Canímar-Aguas Verdes, descubiertos en nooriental de Cuba. In Arqueología de Cuba y de otras áreas antillanas, edited by J. D. Febles and A. V. Rives, pp. 304311. Editorial Academia, La Habana.Google Scholar
Febles, J. D. 1991b Estudio comparativo de las industrias de la piedra tallada de A.guas Verdes (Baracoa) y Playitas (Matanzas). Probable relacion de estas industrias con otras del SE de los Estados Unidos. In Arqueología de Cuba y de otras áreas antillanas, edited by J. D. Febles and A. V. Rives, pp. 312371. Editorial Academia, La Habana.Google Scholar
Febles, J. D. 1991c La piedra tallada del sitio arqueológico Punta del Macao, Guanabo, La Habana, Cuba. In Arqueología de Cuba y de otras áreas antillanas, edited by J. D. Febles and A. V. Rives, pp. 372379. Editorial Academia, La Habana.Google Scholar
Feder, K.L. 1980 Waste Not, Want Not: Differential Lithic Utilization and Efficiency of Use. North American Archaeologist 2:193205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fewkes, J. W 1907 The Aborigines of Puerto Rico and Neighboring Islands. In Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology for 1903–1904, no. 25, pp. 1220. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Flenniken, J. 1981 Replicative Systems Analysis: A Model Applied to Vein Quartz Artifacts from the Hoko River Archaeological Site. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman.Google Scholar
Geier, C. R. 1990 A Middle Woodland Bipolar Pebble Technology in the Lower Chesapeake Area of Tidewater Virginia. Journal of Middle Atlantic Archaeology 6:5574.Google Scholar
Goodyear, A. C. 1993 Tool Kit Entropy and Bipolar Reduction: A Study of Interassemblage Lithic Variability among Paleo-Indian Sites in the Northeastern United States. North American Archaeologist 14:123.Google Scholar
Granberry, J. 1991 Lucayan Toponyms. Journal of the Bahamas Historical Society 13(1):312.Google Scholar
Hackenberger, S. 1991 An Abstract of Archaeological Investigations by the Barbados Museum, 1986. In Proceedings of the Twelfth Congress of the International Association for Caribbean Archaeology, edited by L. S. Robinson, pp. 163174. International Association for Caribbean Archaeology, Martinique.Google Scholar
Harrington, M. R. 1921 Cuba Before Columbus. Indian Notes and Monographs, Miscellaneous 17. Heye Foundation, New York.Google Scholar
Hayden, B. 1980 Confusion in the Bipolar World: Bashed Pebbles and Splintered Pieces. Lithic Technology 9:27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoffman, C. A. Jr. 1967 Bahama Prehistory: Cultural Adaptation to an Island Environment. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Arizona. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Holdaway, S., McPherron, S., and Roth, B. 1996 Notched Tool Reuse and Raw Material Availability in French Middle Paleolithic Sites. American Antiquity 61:377387.Google Scholar
Honea, K. H. 1965 The Bipolar Flaking Technique in Texas and New Mexico. Texas Archaeological Society Bulletin 36:259267.Google Scholar
Jefferies, R. W. 1982 Debitage as an Indicator of Intraregional Activity Diversity in Northwestern Georgia. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 7:99132.Google Scholar
Jeske, R. J. 1992 Energetic Efficiency and Lithic Technology: An Upper Mississippian Example. American Antiquity 57:467481.Google Scholar
Jeske, R. J., and Lurie, R. 1993 The Archaeological Visibility of Bipolar Technology: An Example from the Koster Site. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 18:131160.Google Scholar
Johnson, J. K. 1991 Lithic Technology and Cultural Complexity in the Poverty Point Period. In The Poverty Point Culture. Local Manifestations, Subsistence Practices, and Trade Networks, edited by K. M. Byrd, pp. 181186. Geoscience and Man, Volume 29. Department of Geography and Anthropology, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge.Google Scholar
Keegan, W. F. 1991 The Governor’s Beach Site, Grand Turk. First Progress Report, Miscellaneous Project Report Number 48. Department of Anthropology, Florida Museum of Natural History.Google Scholar
Keegan, W. F. 1992 The People Who Discovered Columbus: The Prehistory of the Bahamas. University of Florida Press, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Keegan, W. F. 1997 Bahamian Archaeology: Life in the Bahamas and Turks and Caicos Before Columbus. Media Publishing House, Nassau, Bahamas.Google Scholar
Keegan, W F., and Mitchell, S. W. 1986 Possible Allochthonous Lucayan Arawak Distributions, Bahamas Islands. Journal of Field Archaeology 13:255258.Google Scholar
Kelly, R. L. 1988 The Three Sides of a Biface. American Antiquity 53:717734.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kimball, L. R. 1992 Early Archaic Settlement and Technology, Lessons from Tellico. In Paleoindian and Early Archaic Period Research in the Lower Southeast: A South Carolina Perspective, edited by D. G. Anderson, K. E. Sassaman, and C. Judge, pp. 143181. Council of South Carolina Archaeologists, Columbia.Google Scholar
Kuhn, S. L. 1991 “Unpacking” Lithic Reduction: Lithic Raw Material Economy in the Mousterian of West-Central Italy. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 10:76106.Google Scholar
Lathrap, D. W. 1973 The Antiquity and Importance of Long-Distance Trade Relationships in the Moist Tropics of Pre-Columbian South America. World Archaeology 5:170186.Google Scholar
Le Blanc, R. 1992 Wedges, Pièces Esquilles, Bipolar Cores, and Other Things: An Alternative to Shott’s View of Bipolar Industries. North American Archaeologist 13:114.Google Scholar
Lewenstein, S. M., and Walker, J. B. 1984 The Obsidian Chip/Manioc Grating Hypothesis and the Mesoamerican Preclassic. Journal of New World Archaeology 6(2):2538.Google Scholar
Littman, S., and Keegan, W. F. 1991 A Shell Bead Manufacturing Center on Grand Turk, Turks, and Caicos Islands, BWI. In Proceedings of the Fourteenth Congress of the International Association for Caribbean Archaeology, edited by A. Cummins and P. King, pp. 147156. Barbados Museum and Historical Society, Bridgetown, Barbados.Google Scholar
Loy, T.H. 1994 Methods in the Analysis of Starch Residues on Prehistoric Stone Tools. In Tropical Archaeobotany: Applications and New Developments, edited by J.G. Hather.pp. 86114. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Luedtke, B. 1992 An Archaeologist’s Guide to Chert and Flint. Archaeological Research Tools 7. Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Magne, M. 1985 Lithics and Livelihood: Stone Tool Technologies of Central and Southern Interior British Columbia. Mercury Series, Archaeological Survey of Canada, Paper 133. National Museum of Man, Ottawa.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morison, S. Eliot, and Obregon, M. 1964 The Caribbean as Columbus Saw It. The Atlantic Monthly Press, Boston.Google Scholar
Morrow, C. A., and Jefferies, R. W. 1989 Trade or Embedded Procurement? A Test Case from Southern Illinois. In Time, Energy, and Stone Tools, edited by R. Torrence, pp. 2733. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Nelson, M. C. 1991 The Study of Technological Organization. In Archaeological Method and Theory, vol. 3, edited by M.B. Schiffer, pp. 57100. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Newman, J. R. 1994 The Effects of Distance on Lithic Material Reduction Technology. Journal of Field Archaeology 21:491501.Google Scholar
Newsom, L. 1993 Native West Indian Plant Use. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Odell, G. H. 1981 The Morphological Express at Function Junction: Searching for Meaning in Lithic Tool Types. Journal of Anthropological Research 37:319342.Google Scholar
Odell, G. H. 1996 Economizing Behavior and the Concept of “Curation.” In Stone Tools: Theoretical Insights into Human Prehistory, edited by G.H. Odell, pp. 5180. Plenum Press, New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Odell, G. H., and Odell-Vereecken, F. 1980 Verifying the Reliability of Lithic Use-Wear Assessments by “Blind Tests.” The Low Power Approach. Journal of Field Archaeology 7:87120.Google Scholar
Pantel, A. G. 1988 Precolumhian Flaked Stone Assemblages in the West Indies. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Pantel, A. G. 1991 How Sophisticated Was the Primitive? Preceramic Source Materials, Lithic Reduction Processes, Cultural Contexts, and Archaeological Inferences. In Proceedings of the Fourteenth Congress of the International Association for Caribbean Archaeology, edited by A. Cummins and P. King, pp. 157169. Barbados Museum and Historical Society, Bridgetown, Barbados.Google Scholar
Parry, W., and R. Kelly 1987 Expedient Core Technology and Sedentism. In The Organization of Core Technology, edited by J.K. Johnson and C.A. Morrow, pp. 285304. Westview Press, Boulder.Google Scholar
Pearsall, D. M. 1989 Paleoethnobotany: A Handbook of Procedures. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Piperno, D. R., and Hoist, I. 1998 The Presence of Starch Grains on Prehistoric Stone Tools from the Humid Tropics: Indications of Early Tuber Use and Agriculture in Panama. Journal of Archaeological Science 25:765776.Google Scholar
Piperno, D., and Pearsall, D.M. 1998 The Origins of Agriculture in the Lowland Neotropics. Academic Press, San Diego.Google Scholar
Rolland, N., and Dibble, H. L. 1990 A New Synthesis of Middle Paleolithic Variability. American Antiquity 55:480499.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rose, R. 1982 The Pigeon Creek Site, San Salvador, Bahamas. The Florida Anthropologist 35(4):129145.Google Scholar
Rose, R. 1987 Lucayan Lifeways at the Time of Columbus. In Proceedings of the First San Salvador Conference, Columbus and His World, edited by D. T. Gerace, pp. 321339. CCFL Field Station, Ft. Lauderdale.Google Scholar
Rostain, S. 1997 Tanki Rip Stone Material. In The Archaeology of Aruba: The Tanki Flip Site, edited by A.H. Versteeg and S. Rostain, pp.221250. Publication of the Archaeological Museum, Aruba 8. Publication of the Foundation for Scientific Research in the Caribbean Region 141. Aruba and Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Roth, W. E. 1924 An Introductory Study of the Arts, Crafts, and Customs of the Guiana Indians. In Thirty Eighth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology (1916–1917), pp. 25745. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Schmalz, R. F. 1960 Flint and the Patination of Flint Artifacts. Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society NS 26:4449.Google Scholar
Scoffin, T. P. 1987 An Introduction to Carbonate Sediments and Rocks. Chapman and Hall, New York.Google Scholar
Sealey, N. E. 1994 Bahamian Landscapes: An Introduction to the Physical Geography of the Bahamas. Media Publishing, Nassau, Bahamas.Google Scholar
Shafer, H. J. 1976 The Consideration of Lithic Refuse at Archaeological Sites. La Tierra 3(2):810.Google Scholar
Shaffer, B. S. 1992 Quarter-Inch Screening. Understanding Biases in Recovery of Vertebrate Faunal Remains. American Antiquity 57:129136.Google Scholar
Shea, J.J. 1992 Lithic Microwear Analysis in Archeology. Evolutionary Anthropology 1(4):143150.Google Scholar
Sheppard, P. J. and Pavlish, L. A. 1992 Weathering of Archaeological Cherts: A Case Study from the Solomon Islands. Geoarchaeology 7(1):4154.Google Scholar
Shott, M. J. 1989 Bipolar Industries: Ethnographic Evidence and Archaeological Implications. North American Archaeologist 10:124.Google Scholar
Siever, R. 1962 Silica Solubility. 0-200°C, and the Diagenesis of Siliceous Sediments. Journal of Geology 70:127150.Google Scholar
Sievert, A. K. 1992a Root and Tuber Resources: Experimental Plant Processing and Resulting Microwear on Chipped Stone Tools. In Préhistoire de I’agriculture: nouvelles approches experimentales et ethnographiques, pp. 5566. Monographic du CRA n 6, ed CNRS.Google Scholar
Sievert, A. K. 1992b Maya Ceremonial Specialization: Lithic Tools from the Sacred Cenote at Chichen Itza, Yucatan. Monographs in World Archaeology 12, Prehistory Press, Madison.Google Scholar
Simpson, B. B., and Conner-Ogorzaly, M. 1986 Economic Botany: Plants in Our World. McGraw-Hill Publishing, New York.Google Scholar
Stapert, D. 1976 Some Natural Surface Modifications on Flint in the Netherlands. Palaeohistoria 18:741.Google Scholar
Sturtevant, W. C. 1969 History and Ethnography of Some West Indian Starches. In The Domestication and Exploitation of Plants and Animals, edited by P.J. Ucko and G. W. Dimbleby, pp. 177199. Duckworth, London.Google Scholar
Sullivan, S. D. 1974 Archaeological Reconnaissance of Eleuthera, Bahamas. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton.Google Scholar
Tabio, E. 1991 Proyecto para una nueva periodización cultural de la prehistoria de Cuba. In Arqueología de Cubay de otras áreas antillanas, edited by J. D. Febles and A. V.Rives, pp. 18. Editorial Academia, La Habana.Google Scholar
Taylor, D. 1938 The Caribs of Dominica. Bulletin 119. Bureau of American Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Torrence, R. 1994 Strategies for Moving on in Lithic Studies. In The Organization of North American Prehistoric Chipped Stone Tool Technologies, edited by P.J. Carr, pp. 123131. Archaeological Series 7, International Monographs in Prehistory, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Unger-Hamilton, R. 1989 The Epi-paleolithic Southern Levant and the Origins of Cultivation. Current Anthropology 30:88103.Google Scholar
Versteeg, A. H., and Rostain, S. (editors) 1997 The Archaeology of Aruba: the Tanki Flip Site. Publication No. 8, Archaeological Museum Aruba. Publication No. 141, Foundation for Scientific Research in the Caribbean Region. Aruba and Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Versteeg, A. H., and Schinkel, K. (editors) 1992 The Archaeology of St. Eustatius, the Golden Rock Site. Publication No. 2, St. Eustatius Historical Foundation. Publication No. 131, Foundation for Scientific Research in the Caribbean Region. Aruba and Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Walker, J. B. 1980a Analysis and Replication of Lithic Artifacts from the Sugar Factory Pier Site, St. Kitts. In Proceedings of the Eighth International Congress for the Study of the Pre-Columbian Cultures of the Lesser Antilles, edited by S.M. Lewenstein, pp. 6979. Anthropological Research Papers No. 22. Arizona State University Tempe.Google Scholar
Walker, J. B. 1980b Analysis and Replication of the Lithic Artifacts from the Sugar Factory Pier Site, St. Kitts, West Indies. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman.Google Scholar
Walker, J. B. 1983 Use Wear Analysis of Caribbean Flaked Stone Tools. In Proceedings of the Ninth International Congress for the Study of the Pre-Columbian Cultures of the Lesser Antilles, edited by L. Allaire and F. M. Mayer, pp. 239247. Centre de Recherches Caraibes, Université de Montréal.Google Scholar
Walker, J. B. 1985 Preliminary Report on the Lithic and Osteological Remains from the 1980, 1981, and 1982 Field Seasons at Hacienda Grande (12psj7-5). In Proceedings of the Tenth Congress of the International Association for Caribbean Archaeology, edited by L. Allaire, pp. 181224. Centre de Recherches Caraibes, Université de Montréal.Google Scholar
Whyte, T. R. 1984 Lithic Artifact Burning and Archaeological Deposit Formation on Three Early Archaic Sites in East Tennessee. Unpublished Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Winter, J., and Gilstrap, M. 1991 Preliminary Results of Ceramic Analysis and the Movements of Populations into the Bahamas. In Proceedings of the Twelfth Congress of the International Association for Caribbean Archaeology, edited by L.S. Robinson, pp. 371386. International Association for Caribbean Archaeology, Martinique.Google Scholar
Yde, J. 1965 Material Culture of the Wai Wai. Ethnographic Series 10. National Museum of Copenhagen, Copenhagen.Google Scholar
Yerkes, R., and Kardulias, N. 1993 Recent Developments in the Analysis of Lithic Artifacts. Journal of Archaeological Research 1:89119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar