References

References

Clues from Bones

*non-technical

Ameen, Carly, Ardern Hulme-Beaman, Allowen Evin, Mietje Germonpre, Kate Britton, Thomas Cuchi, Greger Larson, and Keith Dobney. 2017. A Landmark-based Approach for Assessing the Reliability of Mandibular Tooth Crowding as a Marker of Dog Domestication. Journal of Archaeological Science 85:41-50.

Gilbert, B. Miles. 1973. Mammalian Osteoarchaeology: North America. Missouri Archaeological Society, Columbia.

Gilbert, R. I., Jr. and J. H. Mielke (editors). 1985. The Analysis of Prehistoric Diets. Academic Press, New York.

Grayson, Donald K. 1984. Quantitative Zooarchaeology: Topics in the Analysis of Archaeological Faunas. Academic Press, New York.

Hillson, Simon. 1995. Mammal Bones and Teeth: An Introduction to Methods of Identification. Institute of Archaeology, University College London.

*Iseminger, William R. 2014, Identifying and Understanding Artifacts of Illinois and Neighboring States, Rediscovery, Journal of the Illinois Association for the Advancement of Archaeology, Vol. 6.

Lawler, Dennis, Chris Widga, David A. Rubin, Jennifer A. Reetz, Richard H. Evans, Basil P. Tangredi, Richard M. Thomas, Terrance J. Martin, Charles Hildebolt, Kirk Smith, Daniel Leib, Jill E. Sackman, James G. Avery, and Gail K. Smith. 2016. Differential Diagnosis of Vertebral Spinous Process Deviations in Archaeological and Modern Domestic Dogs. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 9:54-63.

McManamon, Francis P. and Keith W. Kintigh. 2010. Digital Antiquity: Transforming Archaeological Data into Knowledge. SAA Archaeological Record 19(2):37-40.

Morey, Darcy and Michael D. Wiant. 1992. Early Holocene Domestic Dog Burials from the North American Midwest. Current Anthropology 33(2):224-229.

Morin, Eugene and Marie-Cecile Soulier. 2017. New Criteria for the Archaeological Identification of Bone Grease Processing. American Antiquity 82(1):96-122.

Olsen, Stanley. 1960. Postcranial Skeletal Characters of Bison and Bos. Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology 35(4).

Olsen, Stanley. 1968. Fish, Amphibian and Reptile Remains from Archaeological Sites.  Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology 56(2).

Olsen, Stanley. 1972a. Osteology for the Archaeologist, 3, the American Mastodon and Woolly Mammoth. Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology 56(3).

Olsen, Stanley. 1972b. Osteology for the Archaeologist, 4, North American Birds, Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology 56(4).

Olsen, Stanley. 1973, 2nd edition. Mammal Remains from Archaeological Sites, Part I. Southeastern and Southwestern United States. Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology 56 (1).

Purdue, James R. 1983. Epiphyseal Closure in White-tailed Deer. Journal of Wildlife Management 47(4):1207-1213.

Purdue, James R. 1983. Methods of Determining Sex and Body Size in Prehistoric Samples of White-tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus). Transactions of the Illinois State Academy of Science 76 (3-4):351-357.

Purdue, James R. 1987. Estimation of Body Weight of White-Tailed Deer (Odocoileus virginianus) from Bone Size. Journal of Ethnobiology 7(1):1-12.

Reitz, E. J., J. R. Quitmeyer, H.S. Hale, S. J. Scudder, and E. Wing. 1988. Application of Allometry to Zooarchaeology. American Antiquity 52(2):304-317.

Smith, Bruce D. 1975. Toward a More Accurate Estimation of the Meat Yield of Animal Species at Archaeological Sites. Pp. 99-106 in Archaeological Studies: Proceedings of the Groningen Conference, edited by A. T. Clasen. North Holland Publishing Company.

Sobolik, Kristin. D. (editor) 1994. The Diet and Health of Prehistoric Americans. Southern Illinois University. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Occasional Papers, No. 22. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.  

Spielmann, Katherine A. and Keith W. Kintigh. 2011. The Digital Archaeological Record: The Potentials of Archaeozoological Data Integration through tDAR. SAA Archaeological Record 11:22-25.

St.-Pierre, Christian Gates and Renee B. Walker (editors). 2007. Bones as Tools: Current Methods and Interpretations in Worked Bone Studies. BAR International Series 1622. Archaeopress, Oxford.

Tappen, N.C. and G. Richard Peske. 1970. Weathering Cracks and Split-Bone Patterns in Archaeological Bone. American Antiquity 35(3):383-386.

Thomas, David Hurst. 1971. On Distinguishing Cultural from Natural Bone at Archaeological Sites. American Antiquity 36(3):366-371.

White, Karli. 2005. Bone Artifacts from the Carlston Annis Site, 11Bt5. Pp. 339-350 in Archaeology of the Middle Green River Region, Kentucky, edited by W. Marquardt and P. Watson. Institute of Archaeology and Paleoenvironmental Studies Monograph 5. Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville.

White, Theodore. A Method of Calculating the Dietary Percentage of Various Food Animals Utilized by Aboriginal Peoples. American Antiquity 18(4):396-398.

Widga, Chris. 2006. Bison, Bogs, and Big Bluestem: The Subsistence Ecology of Middle Holocene Hunter Gatherers in the Eastern Great Plains. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Kansas, Lawrence.

Wing, Elizabeth and A. Brown. 1979. Paleonutrition: Method and Theory in Prehistoric Foodways. Academic Press, New York.