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From:
adam heinrich <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 1 Nov 2012 22:11:19 -0400
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Hi all,
I am writing to solicit any other leads for publications where historical-period faunal remains have been interpreted as stews or other behaviors that intentionally highly fragmented bones to extract grease/marrow such as nutritional deficiencies.  I have added the list of papers I already have below to avoid duplication. Some are not in-depth faunal papers, but they reference a study- usually Crader's or Otto's.  Thanks, Adam Heinrich



Arkush, Brook S. (2011). Native Responses to European
Intrusion: Cultural Persistence and Agency among Mission Neophytes in Spanish
Colonial Northern California. Historical Archaeology 45(4): 62-90.

 



Crader, Diana. (1984). The Zooarchaeology of the Storehouse
and the Dry Well at Monticello.
American Antiquity 49: 542–558.

 



Crader, Diana. (1989). Faunal Remains from Slave Quarter
Sites at Monticello, Charlottesville,
 Virginia. Archaeozoologia III:
229–236.

 

Crader, Diana. (1990). Slave Diet at Monticello. American Antiquity 55:
690–717.

 

Dixon,
Kelly J., Shannon A. Novak, Gwen Robbins, Julie M. Schablitsky, G. Richard
Scott, and Guy L. Tasa. (2010). “Men, Women, and Children Starving:”
Archaeology of the Donner Family Camp. American
Antiquity 75(3): 627-656.

 

Ellis, Meredith A. B., Christopher W. Merritt, Shannon A.
Novak, and Kelly J. Dixon. (2011). The Signature of Starvation: A Comparison of
Bone Processing of a Chinese Encampment in Montana
and the Donner Party Camp in California.
Historical Archaeology 45(2): 97-112.

 

Hall, Martin. (1992). Small Things and the
Mobile, Conflictual Fusion of Power, Fear, and Desire. In Anne Elizabeth
Yentsch and Mary C. Beaudry (eds.), The
Art and Mystery of Historical Archaeology: Essays in Honor of James Deetz. Ann Arbor, CRC Press, pp.
373-399.

 

Hall, Martin. (n.d.a.). Towards an Archaeology
of Slavery in the Cape: The Castle-
 Cape Town. Unpublished
report submitted to Historical Archaeology Research Group, University of Cape Town.

 

McKee, Larry W. (1987). Delineating Ethnicity from the
Garbage of Early Virginians: Faunal Remains from the Kingsmill Plantation Slave
Quarter. American Archaeology 6(1):
31-39.

 

Otto, John Solomon. (1977). Artifact and Status Differences-
A Comparison of Ceramics from Planter, Overseer, and Slave Sites on an
Antebellum Plantation.
In Stanley
South, (ed.), Research Strategies in
Historical Archaeology. Academic Press, New York.

 

Otto, John Solomon. (1984). Cannon’s Point Plantation,
1794–1860; Living Conditions and Status Patterns in the Old South. Academic
Press, New York,
pp. 91-118.

 

Samford, Patricia. (1996). The Archaeology of African
American Slavery and Material Culture. The
William and Mary Quarterly 53(1): 87-114.

 

Singleton, Theresa A. (1995). The Archaeology of Slavery in North America. Annual
Review of Anthropology 24:119-140.






 		 	   		  

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