Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-r6qrq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T02:34:56.873Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Plateau Interaction Sphere and Late Prehistoric Cultural Complexity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Brian Hayden
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia V5A 1S6 Canada
Rick Schulting
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, Reading RG6 2AA England

Abstract

The Plateau culture area of northwestern North America fits the criteria of an interaction sphere. Understanding the general cultural dynamics responsible for the creation of interaction spheres has been poorly developed in archaeological and ethnological theory. Data from the Plateau Interaction Sphere are used to argue that the main factor responsible for the emergence of interaction spheres in transegalitarian societies is the development of an elite class. Elites who seek to maximize their power and wealth at the tribal level do so in part by establishing trading, marriage, ideological, military, and other ties to elites in other communities and regions. They use these ties to monopolize access to desirable regional prestige goods and to enhance their own socioeconomic positions. In conformity with expectations derived from this model, the data from the Plateau demonstrate that interaction sphere goods are predominantly prestige items and that these concentrate in communities that have the greatest potential to produce surplus and to develop socioeconomic inequalities. These same features also seem to characterize well-known interaction spheres elsewhere in the world.

El área cultural del altiplano del noroeste de Norteamérica cumple con los criterios de una zona de interacción. Generalmente, la comprensión de las fuerzas que crean las zonas de interacción no ha sido suficientemente desarrollada en la teoría arqueológica y etnológica. Los datas de la Zona de Interacción del Altiplano se utilizan para mostrar que el factor principal responsable por el surgimiento de estas zonas en las sociedades “trans-igualitarias” es el desarrollo de las élites. Las élites que desean aumentar sus poderes y sus riquezas, cumplen sus deseos, en parte, por medio del intercambio, del matrimonio, así como a través de alianzas ideológicas, mititares y de otro tipo con élites de otras comunidades y regiones. Las élites utilizan estas relaciones para monopolizar el acceso a los objetos de valor de estas regiones y para asegurar sus propias posiciones socioeconómicas. De acuerdo con las expectativas de este modelo, los datos del Altiplano muestran que los productos dentro del sistema de interacción son pricipalmente objetos de valor; además estos datos muestran que esos productos son más abundantes en las comunidades con mayor potencial para producir excedentes y para establecer desigualdades socioeconómicas. Al mismo tiempo, estos aspectos parecen caracterizar otras zonas de interacción muy conocidas en otras partes del mundo.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 1997

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

Ames, K. 1991 The Archaeology of the Longue Duree: Temporal and Spatial Scale in the Evolution of Social Complexity on the Southern Northwest Coast. Antiquity 65: 935945.Google Scholar
Anastasio, A. 1985 The Southern Plateau: An Ecological Analysis of Intergroup Relations. Northwest Anthropological Research Notes 7(1): 109229.Google Scholar
Antiquus, 1993 The 1992 Archaeological Investigations at the Botticelli Creek Site (EfQw 21), Adams Lake, South- Central B.C. Report on file with Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Antiquus, 1994 The 1992 Archaeological Investigations at the Woolford Point Site (EfQw 2), Adams Lake, South- Central B.C. Report on file with Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Areas, 1988 Archaeological Excavations at the Sahhaltkum Bridge Site (EeQw 30), Chase, B.C. Report on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Atkinson, R. 1937 Indian Camp Sites. Manuscript on file at the Penticton Museum, Penticton, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Barlee, N. L. 1969a Salvage Excavation of a Burial near Grand Forks. Report on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Barlee, N. L. 1969b Journey to the Land of the Shades. Canada West Magazine 1(3): 2831.Google Scholar
Bergen, H. G. 1959 Unusual Artifacts. Screenings 8(4).Google Scholar
Bergen, H. G. 1989 The Bergen Collection. Manuscript on file at the Burke Museum, University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Bergt, J. P. 1978 Results of an X-Ray Fluorescence Study of Copper Artifacts from Old Umatilla, Oregon. In An Archaeological Burial Relocation at Old Umatilla, Oregon, edited by Rice, D. G., pp. 9193. Laboratory of Anthropology, University of Idaho, Moscow.Google Scholar
Blau, P. M. 1977 Inequality and Heterogeneity: A Primitive Theory of Social Structure. Free Press, New York.Google Scholar
Boas, F. 1890 The Shuswap: Second General Report on the Indians of British Columbia. Report of the Sixth Meeting of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, Part 4, pp. 632647. Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England.Google Scholar
Boas, F. 1898 Introduction. In Traditions of the Thompson River Indians of British Columbia, by J. Teit, pp. 118. American Folk-Lore Society and Houghton Mifflin, New York.Google Scholar
Boas, F. 1907 Clubs Made of Bone of Whale. In Archaeology of the Gulf of Georgia and Puget Sound, by H. I. Smith, pp. 403412. Memoirs Vol. 4 No. 6. American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Bouchard, R., and Kennedy, D. 1985 Lakes Indian Ethnography and History. Eeport on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Britten, F. 1962 Interesting specimen. Screenings 11(10).Google Scholar
Brumfiel, E. K., and Earle, T. K. 1987 Specialization, Exchange, and Complex Societies: An Introduction. In Specialization, Exchange, and Complex Societies, edited by Brumfiel, E. K. and Earle, T.K. pp. 19. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Buehler, F. 1956 Stone Sculpture—The Dalles—Celilo Style. Screenings 5(7): 3.Google Scholar
Butler, B. R. 1957 Art of the Lower Columbia Valley. Archaeology 10(3): 158165.Google Scholar
Butler, B. R. 1959 Lower Columbia Valley Archaeology: A Survey and Appraisal of Some Major Archaeological Resources. Tewiba 2(2): 624.Google Scholar
Butler, B. R., and Osborne, D. 1959 Archaeological Evidence for the Use of Atlatl Weights in the Northwest. American Antiquity 25: 215224.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caldwell, J. 1964 Interaction Spheres in Prehistory. Scientific Papers 12: 135143. Hopewellian Studies, Illinois State Museum, Springfield.Google Scholar
Caldwell, W. W. 1954 An Archaeological Survey of the Okanagan and Similkameen Valleys of British Columbia. Anthropology in British Columbia 4: 1025.Google Scholar
Caldwell, W. W. 1956 The Archaeology ofWakemap: A Stratified Site Near The Dalles of the Columbia. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Cannon, A. 1992 Conflict and Salmon on the Interior Plateau of British Columbia. In A Complex Culture of the British Columbia Plateau: Traditional Stl ‘atl ‘imx Resource Use, edited by Hayden, B., pp. 506524. University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver.Google Scholar
Carlson, R. 1994 Trade and Exchange in Prehistoric British Columbia. In Prehistoric Exchange Systems in North America, edited by Baugh, T. and Ericson, J., pp. 307361. Plenum Press, New York.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chance, D. H., and Chance, J. V 1982 Kettle Falls: 1971/1974. Anthropological Research Manuscript Series No. 69. University of Idaho, Moscow.Google Scholar
Chance, D. H., and Chance, J. V 1985 Kettle Falls: 1978 Further Archaeological Investigations in Lake Roosevelt. Anthropological Research Manuscript Series No. 84. University of Idaho, Moscow.Google Scholar
Chatters, J. C. 1986 The Wells Reservoir Archaeological Project. Report to PUD No.l, Douglas County, East Wenatchee, Washington.Google Scholar
Chatters, J. C. 1989 Pacifism and the Organization of Conflict on the Plateau of Northwestern America. In Cultures in Conflict: Current Archaeological Perspectives, edited by Tkaczuk, D. and Vivian, B., pp. 24152. Archaeological Association of the University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta.Google Scholar
Chatters, J. C, and Zweifel, M. K. 1987 The Cemetery at Sntl'exwenewixwtn. Central Washington Archaeological Survey, Archaeological Report No. 87-1. Central Washington University, Ellensburg.Google Scholar
Cline, W., Commons, R. G., Mandelbaum, M., Post, R. H., 1938 The Sinkaietk or Southern Okanogan of Washington. General Series in Anthropology No. 6. George Banta Publishing Menasha, Wisconsin.Google Scholar
Cole, D., and Lockner, B. 1989 The Journals of George M. Dawson: British Columbia, 1875-1878. University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver.Google Scholar
Collier, D., Hudson, A., and Ford, A. 1942 Archaeology of the Upper Columbia Region. Publications in Anthropology 9(1): 1178. University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Combes, J. D. 1968 Burial Practices as an Indicator of Cultural Change in the Lower Snake River Region. Unpublished Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman.Google Scholar
Combes, J. D. 1992 Human Responses to Change in Coastal Geomorphology and Fauna on the Southern Northwest Coast: Archaeological Investigations at Seaside, Oregon. Anthropological Papers No. 45. University of Oregon, Eugene.Google Scholar
Crabtree, R. H. 1957 Two Burial Sites in Central Washington. Unpublished Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Crellin, D. 1994 Is There a Dog in the House: The Cultural Significance of Prehistoric Domesticated Dogs in the Mid Fraser River Region of British Columbia. Unpublished Master's thesis, Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Cressman, L. S. 1960 Cultural Sequences at The Dalles, Oregon. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 50(10). Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Cressman, L. S. 1977 Prehistory of the Far West. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Curtis, E. S. 1911 The North American Indian. Vol. 8. Plimpton Press, Norwood, Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Cybulski, J. 1992 A Greenville Burial Ground: Human Remains and Mortuary Elements in British Columbia Coast Prehistory. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Ottawa, Ontario.Google Scholar
Dalton, G. 1975 Karl Polyani's Analysis of Long-Distance Trade and His Wider Paradigm. In Ancient Civilization and Trade, edited by Sabloff, J. A. and C, C.. Lamberg-Karlovsky, pp. 63132. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Darwent, J. 1996 The Prehistoric Use of Nephrite on the British Columbia Plateau. Unpublished Master's thesis, Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Daugherty, R. D. 1952 Archaeological Investigations in O'Sullivan Reservoir, Grant County, Washington. American Antiquity 17: 37483.Google Scholar
Daugherty, R. D., and Dammel, E. A. 1952 Preliminary Excavations of a Burial Site on the Snake River. Research Studies of the State College of Washington 20(3): 122134.Google Scholar
Dawson, G. M. 1892 Notes on the Shuswap People of British Columbia. Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada 2: 3—44. Montreal, Quebec.Google Scholar
Duff, W 1956 Prehistoric Stone Sculpture of the Fraser River and Gulf of Georgia. Anthropology in British Columbia 5: 15151.Google Scholar
Duff, W 1975 Images: Stone: B. C. University of Washington Press, Seattle.Google Scholar
Dumond, D. E., and Minor, R. 1983 The Wildcat Canyon Site. Anthropological Papers No. 30. University of Oregon, Eugene.Google Scholar
Earle, T. 1990 Style and Iconography as Legitimation in Complex Chiefdoms. In The Uses of Style in Archaeology, edited by Conkey, M. and Hastorf, C., pp. 7381. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Eldridge, M., and Stryd, A. 1983 C.N. Rail Railyard Expansion Project Heritage Mitigation Study, Kamloops Junction, B.C. Report on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Emmons, G. 1923 Jade in British Columbia and Alaska, and Its Use by the Natives. Indian Notes and Monographs No. 35. Museum of the American Indian-Heye Foundation, New York.Google Scholar
Erickson, K. 1990 Marine Shell Utilization in the Plateau Culture Area. Northwest Anthropological Research Notes 24(1): 91144.Google Scholar
Flannery, K. 1968 The Olmec and the Valley of Oaxaca: A Model for Inter-regional Interaction in Formative Times. In Dumbarton Oaks Conference on the Olmec, edited by Benson, E., pp. 79110. Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Friedman, J. 1975 The Prehistoric Uses of Wood at the Ozette Archaeological Site. Ph.D. dissertation, Washington State University, Pullman. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Garth, T. R., Jr. 1952 The Middle Columbia Cremation Complex. American Antiquity 18: 4056.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gerity, T. 1962 Assorted Artifacts, Mostly Bone, from Wakemap Mound. Screenings 11(7): 4.Google Scholar
Gero, J. 1989 Assessing Social Information in Material Objects. In Time, Energy, and Stone Tools, edited by Torrence, R., pp. 92105. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Grabert, G. F. 1970 Prehistoric Cultural Stability in the Okanogan Valley of Washington and British Columbia. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Grabert, G. F. 1974 Okanagan Archaeology: 1966-67. Syesis 7 (supplement 2).Google Scholar
Greengo, R. E. 1982 Studies in Prehistory, Priest Rapids and Wanapum Reservoir Areas, Columbia River, Washington. Department of Anthropology, University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Greengo, R. E. 1986 Prehistory of the Priest Rapids-Wanapum Region, Columbia River, Washington. BAR International Series 290, British Archaeological Reports, Oxford.Google Scholar
Hall, C. 1958 Bonework from Wakemap Mound. Screenings 7(5).Google Scholar
Handy, W 1924 Samoan House Building, Cooking, and Tattooing. Museum Press, Honolulu, Hawaii.Google Scholar
Harris, J., and Galbraith, H. 1958 Untitled. Screenings 7(9): 2.Google Scholar
Harrison, P. D. 1961 Report on the Archaeological Survey of the High Arrow Reservoir. Unpublished manuscript on file at Department of Anthropology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver.Google Scholar
Hayden, B. 1990 Nimrods, Piscators, Pluckers and Planters: The Emergence of Food Production. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 9: 3169.Google Scholar
Hayden, B. 1992 Conclusions: Ecology and Complex Hunter/Gatherers. In A Complex Culture of the British Columbia Plateau: Stl'atl'imx Resource Use, edited by Hayden, B., pp. 525564. University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver.Google Scholar
Hayden, B. 1995 Pathways to Power: Principles for Creating Socioeconomic Inequalities. In Foundations of Social Inequality, edited by Price, T. D. and Feinman, G., pp. 1585. Plenum Press, New York.Google Scholar
Hayden, B. 1996 The Pithouses of Keatley Creek. Harcourt, Brace, New York.Google Scholar
Hayden, B., and Spafford, J. 1993 The Keatley Creek Site and Corporate Group Archaeology. B.C. Studies 99: 106139.Google Scholar
Heizer, R. F 1942 A Decorated Mortar in Columbia River Art Style. American Anthropologist 44(1): 534537.Google Scholar
Hewes, G. 1973 Indian Fisheries Productivity in Pre-contact Times in the Pacific Salmon Area. Northwest Anthropological Research Notes 7(2): 135155.Google Scholar
Hills, L. V 1971 A Talus Burial Site (EqQw 1), Skwaam Bay, Adams Lake, British Columbia. In Aboriginal Man and Environments on the Plateau of Northwest America, edited by Stryd, A. H. and Smith, R.A. pp. 2735. Student's Press, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta.Google Scholar
Hudson, D. 1994 Upper Similkameen Ethnographic and Ethnohistori cal Overview. Paper presented at the B.C. Studies Conference, Okanagan University College, Kelowna, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Huntzinger, D. 1962 Bone Comb. Screenings 11(3).Google Scholar
Iverson, T. M. 1977 The Tucannon Burial Relocation Project, Columbia County, Washington. Anthropological Research Manuscript Series No. 43. University of Idaho, Moscow.Google Scholar
Jackson, H. E. 1991 The Trade Fair in Hunter-Gatherer Interaction. In Between Bands and States, edited by Gregg, Susan, pp. 265286. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Occasional Paper No. 9. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale.Google Scholar
Johnson, M. 1975 Identification de jade y tecnicas para trabajar el jade de Mesoamerica. Presentation al Mesa Redonda de la Sociedad Mexicana de Arqueologia, Tegucigalpa, Honduras.Google Scholar
Johnson-Fladmark, S. 1973 Shuswap Lakes Archaeological Project. Report on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Keddie, G. 1981 The Use and Distribution of Labrets on the North Pacific Rim. Syesis 14: 5980.Google Scholar
Kennedy, D. I. D., and Bouchard, R. 1992 Stl'atl'imx (Fraser River Lillooet) Fishing. In A Complex Culture of the British Columbia Plateau, edited by Hayden, B., pp. 266354. University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver.Google Scholar
Kent, S. 1980 Pacifism: A Myth of the Plateau. Northwest Anthropological Research Notes 14: 12534.Google Scholar
Keyser, J. D. 1992 Indian Rock Art of the Columbia Plateau. University of Washington Press, Seattle.Google Scholar
Krause, A. 1956 The Tlingit Indians. University of Washington Press, Seattle.Google Scholar
Krieger, H. W. 1928a Prehistoric Inhabitants of the Columbia River Valley. Explorations and Fieldwork, pp. 133140. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Krieger, H. W. 1928b A Prehistoric Pit House Village Site on the Columbia River at Wahluke, Grant County, Washington. Proceedings of the Smithsonian Institution 73(11): 129.Google Scholar
Kroeber, A. L. 1939 Cultural and Natural Areas of Native North America. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Lamb, W K. (editor) 1960 The Letters and Journals of Simon Fraser 1806-1808. Macmillan, Toronto.Google Scholar
Larsson, L. 1989 Big Dog and Poor Man. Mortuary Practices in Mesolithic Societies of Southern Sweden. In Approaches to Swedish Prehistory, edited by Larsson, T. B. and Lundmark, H., pp. 211223. BAR International Series 500, British Archaeological Reports, Oxford.Google Scholar
Larsson, L. 1990 Dogs in Fraction—Symbols in Action. In Contributions to the Mesolithic in Europe, edited by Vermeersch, P. M. and Van, P. Peer, pp. 153160. Leuven University Press, Leuven, Belgium.Google Scholar
Leonhardy, E, and D. Rice, 1970 A Proposed Culture Typology for the Lower Snake River Region, Southeastern Washington. Northwest Anthropological Research Notes 4(1): 129.Google Scholar
Lewis-Williams, J. D., and Dowson, T. 1993 On Vision and Power in the Neolithic: Evidence from the Decorated Monuments. Current Anthropology 34: 5565.Google Scholar
Lynch, A. J. 1978 Analysis of Human Skeletal Remains from Umatilla, Oregon. In Archaeological Burial Relocation at Old Umatilla, Oregon, edited by Rice, D., pp. 7291. Laboratory of Anthropology, University of Idaho, Moscow.Google Scholar
Mackey, H. 1974 The Kalapuyans. Mission Hill Museum, Salem, Oregon.Google Scholar
Mackie, Q. 1995 The Taphonomy of Ground Stone Woodworking Tools. BAR International Series 613, British Archaeological Reports, Oxford.Google Scholar
McGuire, R. H. 1992 A Marxist Archaeology. Academic Press, San Diego.Google Scholar
Marshall, A. G. 1991 Nez Perce Subsistence. Paper presented at the 44th Northwest Anthropological Conference, Missoula, Montana.Google Scholar
Marshall, G. 1958 Photographs. Screenings 7(9): 2.Google Scholar
Mohs, G. 1980 The Heritage Resources of the Western Shuswap Basin: An Inventory, Interpretation and Evaluation. Report on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Mohs, G. 1982 The Vallican Archaeological Project, Heritage Site DjQj 1. Report on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Morton, C. 1960 Talus Cremation. Screenings 9(8).Google Scholar
Murdoch, J. 1892 Ethnological Results of the Point Barrow Expedition. Bureau of American Ethnology, 9th Annual Report, pp. 1441. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Nastich, M. 1954 The Lillooet: An Account of the Basis of Individual Status. Unpublished Master's thesis, Department of Economics, Political Science, and Sociology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver.Google Scholar
Nelson, C. M. 1969 The Sunset Creek Site (45-KT-28) and its Place in Plateau Prehistory. Reports of Investigations No. 47. Laboratory of Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman.Google Scholar
Nelson, D. E., D'Auria, J. M., and Bennett, R. B. 1975 Characterization of Pacific Northwest Coast Obsidian by X-Ray Fluorescence Analysis. Archaeometry 17(l): 8597.Google Scholar
Oliver, L. 1991 Found Human Remains 90-17B, Oliver, B.C., Archaeological Site DhQv-T26. Report on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Oliver, L. 1967 Social Structure of the Tlingit. Anthropological Papers No. 26. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Osborne, D. H. 1957 Excavations in the McNary Reservoir Basin Near Umatilla, Oregon. Bulletin No. 166, River Basin Surveys Papers No. 8. Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Osborne, D., Bryan, A., and Crabtree, R. 1961 The Sheep Island Site and the Mid-Columbia Valley. Bulletin No. 179, pp. 267306. Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Ostapkowicz, J. M. 1994 Tsagigldlal: “She Who Watches“: Interpreting the “Grinning Face” Image of the Columbia River Art Complex. Unpublished Master's thesis, Sainsbury Research Unit for the Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas, University of East Anglia, Norwich, England.Google Scholar
Paine, J. 1979 Skin Deep: A Brief History of Tattooing. Mankind 6: 1832.Google Scholar
Pavesic, M. G., and Studebaker, W. 1993 Backtracking: Ancient Art of Southern Idaho. Idaho Museum of Natural History, Pocatello.Google Scholar
Perry, J. 1939 Notes on a Type of Indian Burial Found in the Mid- Columbia River District of Central Washington. New Mexico Anthropologist 3: 8082.Google Scholar
Phebus, G. E. 1978 The Smithsonian Institution 1934 Bonneville Reservoir Salvage Archaeology Project. Northwest Anthropological Research Notes 12(2): 113177.Google Scholar
Pokotylo, D. L., Binkley, M. E., and Curtin, A. J. 1987 The Cache Creek Burial Site (EeRh 1), British Columbia. Contributions to Human History No. 1, pp. 114. British Columbia Provincial Museum, Victoria.Google Scholar
Polyani, K. 1963 Ports of Trade in Early Societies. Journal of Economic History 23: 3015.Google Scholar
Post, R. 1938 The Sinkaietk or Southern Okanagon of Washington: The Subsistence Quest. In The Sinkaietk or Southern. Okanogan of Washington, edited by Spier, L., pp. 1136. General Series in Anthropology 6.. George Banta Publishing, Menasha, Wisconsin.Google Scholar
Ray, V F. 1932 The Sanpoil and Nespelem: Salishan Peoples of Northeastern Washington. Publications in Anthropology No. 5. University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Ray, V F. 1939 Cultural Relations in the Plateau of Northwestern America. Publications of the Frederick Webb Hodge Fund No. 3. Southwest Museum, Los Angeles.Google Scholar
Rice, D. G. 1978 Summary and Findings of Archaeological Burial Relocation Work at Old Umatilla, Oregon. In An Archaeological Burial Relocation at Old Umatilla, Oregon, edited by Rice, D. G., pp. 2072. Laboratory of Anthropology, University of Idaho, Moscow.Google Scholar
Richards, T. H., and Rousseau, M. K. 1982 Archaeological Investigation on Kamloops Indian Reserve No. 1, Kamloops, B.C. Report on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small, Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Richards, T. H., and Rousseau, M. K. 1987 Late Prehistoric Cultural Horizons on the Canadian Plateau. Publication No. 16. Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Romanoff, S. 1992a Fraser Lillooet Salmon Fishing. In A Complex Culture of the British Columbia Plateau, edited by Hayden, B., pp. 222265. University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver.Google Scholar
Romanoff, S. 1992b The Cultural Ecology of Hunting and Potlatches Among the Lillooet Indians. In A Complex Culture of the British Columbia Plateau, edited by Hayden, B., pp. 470505. University of British Columbia Press, Vancouver.Google Scholar
Rosman, A., and Rubel, P. 1971 Feasting with Mine Enemy. Waveland Press, Prospect Heights, Illinois.Google Scholar
Sanger, D. 1961 A Burial Site Survey of the Shuswap, Thompson, and Lillooet Area in South-Central British Columbia. Manuscript on file at the Department of Anthropology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver.Google Scholar
Sanger, D. 1968a The Chase Burial Site, EeQw.l. National Museums of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario.Google Scholar
Sanger, D. 1968b The Texas Creek Burial Site Assemblage, British Columbia. Anthropology Papers No. 17. National Museum of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario.Google Scholar
Sanger, D. 1969 Cultural Traditions in the Interior of British Columbia. Syesis 2: 188200.Google Scholar
Sanger, D. 1970 The Archaeology of the Lochnore-Nesikep Locality, British Columbia. Syesis 3 (Supplement 1): 1146.Google Scholar
Schmandt-Besserat, D. 1977 The Beginnings of the Use of Clay in Turkey. Anatolian Studies 27.Google Scholar
Schortman, E. M., and Urban, P. A. 1988 Modeling Interregional Interaction in Prehistory. In Advances in Archaeological Method and Theory, vol. 11, edited by Schiffer, M. B., pp. 3795. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Schulting, R. J. 1994a Hair of the Dog: The Identification of a Coast Salish Dog-Hair Blanket from Yale, British Columbia. Canadian Journal of Archaeology 18: 5776.Google Scholar
Schulting, R. J. 1994b Field notes in possession of author, Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, Reading, England.Google Scholar
Schulting, R. J. 1995 An Investigation of Mortuary Variability and Socioeconomic Status Differentiation on the Columbia- Eraser Plateau. Publication No. 21, Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Schulting, R., and Oliver, L. 1997 Interior Salish Burial Excavations in British Columbia. In Burial Practices in the Plateau of Northwestern North America, edited by Sprague, R.. Manuscript on file at the Department of Archaeology, University of Reading, Reading, England.Google Scholar
Seaman, N. G. 1946 Indian Relics of the Pacific Northwest. Binfords and Mort, Portland, Oregon.Google Scholar
Sherratt, A. 1990 The Genesis of Megaliths: Monumentality, Ethnicity, and Social Complexity in Neolithic North-west Europe. World Archaeology 22: 14767.Google Scholar
Shiner, J. 1952 A Preliminary Report on the Archaeology of site 45- WW-6 on the Columbia River, Washington. River Basin Surveys, Columbia Basin Project. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Shiner, J. 1961 The McNary Reservoir: A Study in Plateau Archaeology. Bulletin No. 179, River Basin Surveys Papers No. 23. Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, D.C.Google Scholar
Siegberg, J. 1966 Herzog Progress Report. Screenings 15(9).Google Scholar
Siegberg, R. 1967 McMinnville. Screenings 16(1).Google Scholar
Skinner, M., and Copp, S. 1986 The Nicoamen River Burial Site (EbRi 7), near Lytton, British Columbia. Report on file with Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Sloan, X, and Greengo, R. 1963 Interim Report, Part II, to the National Park Service Region Four Archaeological Salvage (Wells Hydroelectric Project). Report on file, Department of Anthropology, University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Smith, H. I. 1899 Archaeology of Lytton, British Columbia. Memoirs 2(3): 129161. American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Smith, H. I. 1900 Archaeology of the Thompson River Region, British Columbia. Memoirs 2(6): 401142. American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Smith, H. I. 1907 Archaeology of the Gulf of Georgia and Puget Sound. Memoir 4(6): 303141. American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Smith, H. I. 1910 The Archaeology of the Yakima Valley. Anthropological Papers 6(1). American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Smith, H. I. 1925-1930 Field notes on file at the Canadian Museum of Civilization, Ottawa, Ontario.Google Scholar
Smith, W 1977 Archaeological Explorations in the Columbia Basin: A Report on the Mesa Project, 1973-1975. Central Washington Survey, Department of Anthropology, Central Washington University, Cheney.Google Scholar
Spier, L., and Sapir, E. 1930 Wishram Ethnography. Publications in Anthropology 3(3): 151300. University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Spinden, H. J. 1964 The Nez Perce Indians. Memoirs of the American Anthropological Association 2(3): 165174. Kraus Reprint Company, New York.Google Scholar
Sprague, R. 1959 A Comparative Cultural Analysis of an Indian Burial Site in Southwest Washington. Unpublished Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, Washington State University, Pullman.Google Scholar
Sprague, R. 1967 Aboriginal Burial Practices in the Plateau Region of North America. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Arizona, Tucson. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Sprague, R. 1971 Annotated Bibliography of Lake Roosevelt Archaeology. Washington Archaeologist 15(1): 224.Google Scholar
Sprague, R., and Birkby, W H. 1970 Miscellaneous Columbia Plateau Burials. Tebiwa 13: 132.Google Scholar
Sprague, R., and Birkby, W H. 1973 Burials Recovered from the Narrows Site (450K11), Columbia River, Washington. Report on file at the Laboratory of Anthropology, University of Idaho, Moscow.Google Scholar
Sproat, G. 1987 The Nootka. Sono Nis Press, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Stapp, D. C. 1984 Late Protohistoric Burials with Copper Artifacts in the Pacific Northwest. Unpublished Master's thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Idaho, Moscow.Google Scholar
Strong, W. D., Schenck, W. E., and Steward, J. H. 1930 Archaeology of the Dalles-Deschutes Region. Publications in American Archaeology and Ethnology 29(1): 1154. University of California, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Strong, E. 1956 Cremation Artifacts. Screenings 5(9).Google Scholar
Strong, E. 1957a Personal Decoration. Screenings 6(2).Google Scholar
Strong, E. 1957b Wakemap Mound Bone Artifacts. Screenings 6(5).Google Scholar
Strong, E. 1958 Some Facts about OMSI. Screenings 7(9).Google Scholar
Strong, E. 1959 Stone Age on the Columbia River. Binfords and Mort, Portland, Oregon.Google Scholar
Strong, E. 1976 Wakemap Mound. Binfords and Mort, Portland, Oregon.Google Scholar
Stryd, A. H. 1973 The Later Prehistory of the Lillooet Area, British Columbia. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Archaeology, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta.Google Scholar
Stryd, A. H. 1981a Prehistoric Sculptures from the Lillooet Area of British Columbia. Datum 6(1): 915.Google Scholar
Stryd, A. H. 1981b The 1980 Investigations of the Monte Creek Archaeological Site (EdQx 15). Report on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Stryd, A. H. 1983 Prehistoric Mobile Art from the Mid-Fraser and Thompson River Areas. In Indian Art Traditions of the Northwest Coast, edited by Carlson, R. L., pp. 167181. Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Stryd, A. H., and Baker, J. 1968 Salvage Excavations at Lillooet, British Columbia. Syesis 1: 4756.Google Scholar
Stryd, A. H., and Hills, L. V 1972 An Archaeological Site Survey of the Lillooet-Big Bar Area, British Columbia. Syesis 5: 191209.Google Scholar
Swanson, E. H., Jr. 1962 The Emergence of Plateau Culture. Occasional Paper No. 8, Idaho State College Museum, Pocatello.Google Scholar
Teit, J. A. 1900 The Thompson Indians of British Columbia. Memoirs 2(4): 163392. American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Teit, J. A. 1906 The Lillooet Indians. Memoirs 2(5): 195292. American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Teit, J. A. 1909 The Shuswap. Memoirs 4(7). American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Teit, J. A. 1912a Mythology of the Thompson Indians. Memoirs 8: 199416. American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Teit, J. A. 1912b Traditions of the Lillooet Indians of British Columbia. Journal of American Folk-Lore 25: 287371.Google Scholar
Teit, J. A. 1917 Folk-Tales ofSalishan and Sahaptin Tribes. American Folk-Lore Society, New York.Google Scholar
Teit, J. A. 1928 The Middle Columbia Salish. Publications in Anthropology 2(4): 83128. University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Teit, J. A. 1930 The Salishan Tribes of the Western Plateaus. 45th Annual Report, pp. 25396. Bureau of American Ethnology, Washington, D.C. Google Scholar
Tepper, L. H. 1987 The Interior Salish Tribes of British Columbia: A Photographic Collection. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Mercury Series No. 111. Canadian Ethnology Service. National Museums of Canada, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Turner, N., and Taylor, R. 1972 A Review of the Northwest Coast Tobacco Mystery. Syesis 5: 249257.Google Scholar
Turner, N., Thompson, L., Thompson, M., and York, A. 1990 Thompson Ethnobotany: Knowledge and Usage of Plants by the Thompson Indians of British Columbia. Memoir No. 3. Royal British Columbia Museum, Victoria,Google Scholar
von Krogh, H. 1976 Archaeological Investigations at the Flood and Pipeline Sites, near Hope, British Columbia. Unpublished master's thesis, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia.Google Scholar
von Krogh, H. 1978 Archaeological Investigations in the Spences Bridge Locality, British Columbia. Report on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Weld, W. 1963 Dentalium: The Money Shell of the Northwest Coast. Washington Archaeologist 7(1): 418.Google Scholar
Wiedemann, P. 1963 The Willows. Screenings 12(6).Google Scholar
Wigen, B. 1984 Archaeological Salvage and Monitoring Proceedings at Site EeRl-192. Report on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Willey, G. 1966 Introduction to American Archaeology, Vol. I. Prentice-Hall, Englewood-Cliffs, New Jersey.Google Scholar
Wilson, I. R. 1992 Excavations at the Baker Site: EdQx 43, Monte Creek, Permit 91-107. Report on file with the Archaeology Branch, Ministry of Small Business, Culture, and Tourism, Victoria, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Wilson, R. L. 1976 Archaeological Investigations Near Kamloops, British Columbia. Unpublished Master's thesis. Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Wilson, Robert L., and Carlson, Catherine 1980 The Archaeology of Kamloops. Publication No. 7. Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia.Google Scholar
Wingert, P. S. 1952 Prehistoric Stone Sculpture of the Pacific Northwest. Portland Art Museum, Portland, Oregon.Google Scholar
Wobst, M. 1977 Stylistic Behavior and Information Exchange. In Papers for the Director: Research Essays in Honor of James B. Griffin, edited by Cleland, C., pp. 317342. Academic Press, New York.Google Scholar
Wood, W. R. 1980 Plains Trade in Prehistoric Intertribal Relations. In Anthropology on the Great Plains, edited by Wood, W. R. and Liberty, M., pp. 98109. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Wyatt, D. 1972 The Indian History of the Nicola Valley, British Columbia. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Brown University. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
York, A., Daly, R., and Arnett, C. 1993 They Write Their Dreams on the Rocks Forever: Rock Writings in the Stein River Valley of British Columbia. Talonbooks, Vancouver, British Columbia.Google Scholar