Hostname: page-component-84b7d79bbc-7nlkj Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-30T11:54:57.189Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Biface Reduction and the Measurement of Dalton Curation: A Southeastern United States Case Study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Michael J. Shott
Affiliation:
Department of Classical Studies, Anthropology, and Archaeology, University of Akron, Akron, OH 44325-1910 (shott@uakron.edu)
Jesse A. M. Ballenger
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Arizona, TucsonAZ 85721 (jamb@email.arizona.edu)

Abstract

Stone tools were reduced during use, with implications both for classification and curation rates. Ballenger's “expended utility” (EU) is a continuous reduction measure devised for Dalton bifaces, described by its mean but also its distribution among specimens. We validate EU as a reduction measure by reference to experimental and contextual controls. We compare EU between the “special context” Dalton assemblages Sloan and Hawkins in Arkansas and Ballenger's eastern Oklahoma “occupation context” ones. Then we fit EU distributions to mathematical functions to model the curation process. Results show that Oklahoma bifaces were better curated than Arkansas ones. Fitting distributions to the Gompertz-Makeham model efficiently describes distributions' shape and scale, which are as important to know as central tendency. Curation is not a categorical state but a continuous variable whose complex variation implicates complex causes.

Résumé

Résumé

Las herramientas líticas se reducían durante uso, teniendo esto consecuencias tanto para su clasificación como para determinar su tasa de conservación. En este ensayo se presenta una función matemática que permite confirmar una medida de reducción en bífaces de acuerdo a su distribución estadística, lo que permite modelar el proceso de conservación. El índice “utilidad explotada” (UE) de Ballenger es una medida de reducción derivada de los bifaces de tipo Dalton. Primero, confirmamos la eficacia del UE como medida de reducción por medio de controles experimentales y contextuales. Posteriormente, comparamos el UE entre el “contexto especial” de los conjuntos arqueológicos Sloan y Hawkins en Arkansas por un lado y los “contextos ocupacionales” del este de Oklahoma, estudiados por Ballenger, por el otro. El UE es una medida de reducción continua formulada en base alpromedio estadístico pero también de acuerdo con la distribución de los distintos especimenes de la muestra. Los análisis estadisticos y los ajustes de los modelos matemáticos demuestran que los bifaces procedentes de los contextos ocupacionales de Oklahoma presentan instrumentos mas conservados que los de Arkansas. Las distribuciones que se ajustan al modelo Gompertz-Makeham describen de manera más eficiente la forma y la escala de cada una de ellas, propiedades tan importantes de conocer como tendencia central. La curaduría de los instrumentos líticos no debe ser considerada como un estado definitivo sino como una variable continua, y su compleja variabilidad implica causas igualmente complejas.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 2007

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

Ahler, Stanley A. 1971 Projectile Point Form and Function at Rodgers Shelter, Missouri. Missouri Archaeological Society Research Series No. 8. Columbia.Google Scholar
Ahler, Stanley A., and Geib, Phil R. 2000 Why Flute? Folsom Point Design and Adaptation. Journal of Archaeological Science 27:799820.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aldenderfer, Mark S. 1981 Creating Assemblages by Computer Simulation: The Development and Uses of ABSIM. In Simulations in Archaeology, edited by Jeremy Sabloff, pp. 67117. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Andrefsky, William 2006 Experimental and Archaeological Verification of an Index of Retouch for Hafted Bifaces. American Antiquity 71:743757.Google Scholar
Ballenger, Jesse A.M. 1998 The McKellips Site: Contributions to Dalton Occupation, Technology, and Mobility from Eastern Oklahoma. Southeastern Archaeology 17:158165.Google Scholar
Ballenger, Jesse A.M. 2001 Dalton Settlement in the Arkoma Basin of Eastern Oklahoma. Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History Monographs in Anthropology No. 2. Norman, Oklahoma.Google Scholar
Bement, Leland 2002 Pickin’ Up the Pieces: Folsom Projectile Point Resharpening Technology. In Folsom Technology and Life-ways, edited by John E. Clark and Michael B. Collins, pp. 135140. Lithic Technology, Special Publication No. 4.Google Scholar
Binford, Lewis R. 1973 Interassemblage Variability: The Mousterian and the ‘Functional’ Argument. In The Explanation of Culture Change: Models in Prehistory, edited by Colin Renfrew, pp. 227254. London, Duckworth.Google Scholar
Blades, Brooke S. 2003 End Scraper Reduction and Hunter-Gatherer Mobility. American Antiquity 68:141156.Google Scholar
Bradley, Bruce 2001 Sloan Site, Arkanasas, Sloan and Dalton Points. Electronic document, available at www.primtech.net/sloan/sloanl8rl.html. Accessed September 2005.Google Scholar
Buchanan, Briggs 2006 An Analysis of Folsom Projectile Point Resharpening Using Quantitative Comparisons of Form and Allometry. Journal of Archaeological Science 33:185199.Google Scholar
Chapman, Carl H. 1975 The Archaeology of Missouri. University of Missouri Press, Columbia.Google Scholar
Clarkson, Chris 2002 An Index of Invasiveness for the Measurement of Unifacial and Bifacial Retouch: A Theoretical, Experimental and Archaeological Verification. Journal of Archaeological Science 29:6575.Google Scholar
Clarkson, Chris 2004 Technological Provisioning and Assemblage Variation in the Eastern Victoria River Region, Northern Australia: A Darwinian Approach. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Australian National University, Canberra.Google Scholar
Clarkson, Chris, and Lamb, Lara (editors) 2005 Rocking the Boat: Recent Australian Approaches to Lithic Reduction, Use and Classification. British Archaeological Reports International Series. Oxford, Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Collins, Charles D., Danielsons, Andris A., and Donohue, James A. 1983 Investigations at the Montgomery Site, 23CE261. Unpublished ms. on file, Dept. of Anthropology, University of Missouri, Columbia.Google Scholar
Cox, Steven L. 1986 A Re-analysis of the Shoop Site. Archaeology of Eastern North America 14:101170.Google Scholar
Crompton, R. H., and Gowlett, J. A. 1993 Allometry and Multidimensional Form in Acheulean Bifaces from Kilombe, Kenya. Journal of Human Evolution 25:175199.Google Scholar
Davis, Z. J., and Shea, J. J. 1998 Quantifying Lithic Curation: An Experimental Test of Dibble and Pelcin’s Original Flake-tool Mass Predictor. Journal of Archaeological Science 25:603610.Google Scholar
Dibble, Harold L. and Pelcin, Andrew W. 1995 The Effect of Hammer Mass and Velocity on Flake Mass. Journal of Archaeological Science 22:429439.Google Scholar
Flenniken, J. Jeffrey, and Wilke, Philip J. 1989 Typology, Technology, and Chronology of Great Basin Dart Points. American Anthropologist 91:149158.Google Scholar
Galm, Jerry R., and Hofman, Jack L. 1984 The Billy Ross Site: Analysis of a Dalton Component from the Southern Arkansas Basin of Eastern Oklahoma. Bulletin of the Oklahoma Archaeological Society 18:3773.Google Scholar
Gillam, J. Christopher 1996 A View of Paleoindian Settlement from Crowley’s Ridge. Plains Anthropologist 41:273286.Google Scholar
Goodyear, Albert C. 1974 The Brand Site: A Techno-Functional Study of a Dalton Site in Northeast Arkansas. Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series No. 7. Fayetteville.Google Scholar
Goodyear, Albert C. 1982 The Chronological Position of the Dalton Horizon in the Southeastern United States. American Antiquity 47:382395.Google Scholar
Gramly, R. M. 1995 The Olive Branch Site: The Initial Archaic Period in Southern Illinois. The Amateur Archaeologist 2:4074.Google Scholar
Grimes, John R., and Grimes, Beth G. 1985 Flakeshavers: Morphometric, Functional and Life-Cycle Analyses of a Paleoindian Unifacial Tool Class. Archaeology of Eastern North America 13:3557.Google Scholar
Higgins, Michael J. 1990 The Nochta Site: The Early, Middle, and Late Archaic Occupations. American Bottom Archaeology, FAI-270 Site Reports Volume 21. University of Illinois Press, Urbana.Google Scholar
Hiscock, Peter 1988 A Cache of Tulas from the Boulia District, Western Queensland. Archaeology in Oceania 23:6070.Google Scholar
Hiscock, Peter, and Attenbrow, Val 2003 Early Australian Implement Variation: A Reduction Model. Journal of Archaeological Science 30:239249.Google Scholar
Hoffman, C. Marshall 1985 Projectile Point Maintenance and Typology: Assessment with Factor Analysis and Canonical Correlation. In For Concordance in Archaeological Analysis: Bridging Data Structure, Quantitative Technique, and Theory, edited by C. Carrpp. 566612. Westport Press, Kansas City, Missouri.Google Scholar
Jefferies, Richard W. 1990 A Technological and Functional Analysis of Middle Archaic Hafted Endscrapers From the Black Earth Site, Saline County, Illinois. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 15:336.Google Scholar
Koldehoff, Brad, and Walthall, John A. 2004 Settling In: Hunter-Gatherer Mobility during the Pleistocene-Holocene Transition in the Central Mississippi Valley. In Aboriginal Ritual and Economy in the Eastern Woodlands: Essays in Memory of Howard Dalton Winters, edited by A.Cantwell, L. Conrad, and J. Reyman, pp. 4972. Illinois State Museum Scientific Papers, Vol. 30. Springfield.Google Scholar
Kuhn, Steven L. 1990 A Geometric Index of Reduction for Unifacial Stone Tools. Journal of Archaeological Science 17:583593.Google Scholar
Lerner, Harry 2004 Dynamic Variables and the Interpretation of Late Prehistoric Huron Chipped Stone Tools. Paper presented at the 69th Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Montreal.Google Scholar
Luchterhand, Kubet 1970 Early Archaic Projectile Points and Hunting Patterns in the Lower Illinois Valley. Illinois State Museum Report of Investigations No. 19. Springfield.Google Scholar
McNutt, Charles H. 1996 The Central Mississippi Valley: A Summary. In Prehistory of the Central Mississippi Valley, edited by Charles McNutt, pp. 187257. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Moore, John H. 2001 Evaluating Five Models of Human Colonization. American Anthropologist 103:395408.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morrow, Juliet E. 1996 End Scraper Morphology and Use-Life: An Approach for Studying Paleoindian Lithic Technology and Mobility. Lithic Technology 22:7085.Google Scholar
Morse, Dan F. 1971 The Hawkins Cache: A Significant Dalton Find in Northeast Arkansas. Arkansas Archaeologist 12:920.Google Scholar
Morse, Dan F. 1975 Reply to Schiffer. The Cache River Archeological Project: An Experiment in Contract Archeology, edited by M. Schiffer and J. House, pp. 113119. Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series No. 8. Fayetteville.Google Scholar
Morse, Dan F. 1997 Sloan: A Dalton Cemetery in Arkansas. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Morse, Dan F., and Morse, Phyllis A. 1983 Archaeology of the Central Mississippi Valley. Academic, New York.Google Scholar
Morse, Dan F., and Morse, Phyllis A. 1996 Northeast Arkansas. In Prehistory of the Central Mississippi Valley, C. McNutt ed., pp. 119135. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa.Google Scholar
Norusis, Marija 1997 SPSS Advanced Statistics 7.5. SPSS, Chicago.Google Scholar
O’Brien, Michael J., and Lee Lyman, R. 2003 Cladistics and Archaeology. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
O’Brien, Michael J., and Wood, Raymond 1997 The Prehistory of Missouri. University of Missouri Press, Columbia.Google Scholar
O’Connell, James F, and Inoway, Cari M. 1994 Surprise Valley Projectile Points and Their Chronological Implications. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 16:162198.Google Scholar
Pletcher, S.D. 1999 WINMODEST Documentation. Unpublished ms. on file, Baylor University Department of Medicine, Houston.Google Scholar
Pletcher, S. D., Kahezaeli, A. A., and Curtsinger, J. W 2000 Why Do Life Spans Differ? Partitioning Mean Longevity Differences in Terms of Age-Specific Mortality Parameters. Journal of Gerontology: Biological Sciences 55A:B381B389.Google Scholar
Price, James E., and Krakker, James J. 1975 Dalton Occupation of the Ozark Border. University of Missouri Museum of Anthropology, Museum Briefs No. 20. Columbia.Google Scholar
Redfield, Alden, and Moselage, John H. 1970 The Lace Place, A Dalton Project Site in the Western Lowland in Eastern Arkansas. Arkansas Archeologist 11:2144.Google Scholar
Schiffer, Michael B. 1975 Some Further Comments on the Dalton Settlement Pattern Hypothesis. In The Cache River Archeological Project: An Experiment in Contract Archeology, edited by M. Schiffer and J. House, pp. 103112. Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series No. 8. Fayetteville.Google Scholar
Schiffer, Michael B. 1976 Behavioral Archeology. Academic, New York.Google Scholar
Sherwood, Sarah C., Driskell, Boyce N., Randall, Asa R., and Meeks, Scott C. 2004 Chronology and Stratigraphy at Dust Cave, Alabama. American Antiquity 69:533554.Google Scholar
Shott, Michael J. 1989 On Tool Class Use Lives and the Formation of Archaeological Assemblages. American Antiquity 54:930.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shott, Michael J. 1995 How Much Is a Scraper? Curation, Use Rates and the Formation of Scraper Assemblages. Lithic Technology 20:5372.Google Scholar
Shott, Michael J. 1996a An Exegesis of the Curation Concept. Journal of Anthropological Research 52:259280.Google Scholar
Shott, Michael J. 1996b Stage Versus Continuum in the Debris Assemblage from Production of a Fluted Biface. Lithic Technology 21:622.Google Scholar
Shott, Michael J. 2002 Weibull Estimation of Use-Life Distribution in Experimental Spear-Point Data. Lithic Technology 27:93109.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shott, Michael J. 2003 Size as a Factor in Assemblage Variation: The European Middle Palaeolithic Viewed from a North American Perspective. In Lithic Analysis at the Millennium, edited by N. Moloney and M. Shott, pp. 137149. Archtype, London.Google Scholar
Shott, Michael J. 2005 The Reduction Thesis and Its Discontents: Overview of the Volume. In Rocking the Boat: Recent Australian Approaches to Lithic Reduction, Use and Classification, edited by C. Clarkson and L. Lamb, pp. 109125. British Archaeological Reports International Series. Oxford, Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Shott, Michael J., Bradbury, Andrew P., Carr, Philip J., and Odell, George H. 2000 Flake Size from Platform Attributes: Predictive and Empirical Approaches. Journal of Archaeological Science 27:877894.Google Scholar
Shott, M. J., and Sillitoe, Paul 2004 Modeling Use-life Distributions in Archaeology Using New Guinea Wola Ethnographic Data. American Antiquity 69:339355.Google Scholar
Shott, M. J., and Sillitoe, Paul 2005 Use Life and Curation in New Guinea Experimental Used Flakes. Journal of Archaeological Science 32:653663.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shott, M. J., and Williams, Eduardo 2001 Datos Censales Sobre la Vida Util de la Cerámica: Estudio Etnoarqueológico en Michoacán. In Estudios Cerámicos en el Occidente y el Norte de Mexico, edited by E. Williams and P. Weigand, pp. 97125. Colegio de Michoacan, Zamora, Mexico.Google Scholar
Steele, Teresa 2003 Using Mortality Profiles to Infer Behavior in the Fossil Record. Journal of Mammalogy 84:418430.Google Scholar
Walthall, John A., and Holley, George R. 1997 Mobility and Hunter-Gatherer Toolkit Design: Analysis of a Dalton Lithic Cache. Southeastern Archaeology 16:152162.Google Scholar
Walthall, John A., and Koldehoff, Brad 1998 Hunter-Gatherer Interaction and Alliance Formation: Dalton and the Cult of the Long Blade. Plains Anthropologist 43:257273.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walthall, John A., and Koldehoff, Brad 1999 Across the Divide: Dalton Land Use in the Southern Till Plains. Illinois Archaeology 11:2749.Google Scholar
Webb, Paul A., Hargrave, Michael L., and Blanton, Dennis B. 1989 Archaeological Investigations in the Thebes Gap Vicinity, Alexander County, Illinois. Southern Illinois University Center for Archaeological Investigations, Research Paper 55. Carbondale.Google Scholar
Wood, James W., Holman, Darryl J., O’Connor, Kathleen A., and Ferrell, Rebecca J. 2002 Mortality Models of Paleodemography. Paleodemography: Age Distributions From Skeletal Samples, edited by R. Hoppa and J. Vaupel, pp. 129168. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Wyckoff, Don G., and Bartlett, Robert 1995 Living on the Edge: Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene Cultural Interaction Along the Southeastern Woodlands-Plains Border. In Native American Interactions: Multiscalar Analyses and Interpretations in the Eastern Woodlands, edited by M. Nassaney and K. Sassaman, pp. 2772. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Yerkes, R., and Gaertner, L. 1997 Micro-wear Analysis of Dalton Artifacts. In Sloan: A Dalton Cemetery in Arkansas, edited by D. Morse, pp. 5871. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar