Folsom Lithic Technology

Folsom Lithic Technology
Author: Daniel S. Amick
Publsiher: Berghahn Books
Total Pages: 234
Release: 1999
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: WISC:89073201493

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The Folsom lithic technology is found among the hunter-gatherers of the Pleistocene grasslands of west-central North America. The eleven papers in this volume focus on identifying patterning within the lithic assemblages, detecting structure and variation and providing insights into the organisation of the technology.

Folsom Technology and Lifeways

Folsom Technology and Lifeways
Author: John E Clarke,Michael B Collins
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 484
Release: 2021-10-28
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781315428314

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This volume is an extensive collection of chapters discussing Folsom artifacts and sites, as well as innovative experiments undertaken to understand Folsom technology and lifeways. Public and private collections of Folsom artifacts were brought together with professional and amateur lithic analysts and knappers in an attempt to determine how the ancient stone tools were made and used. In addition, Folsom Technology and Lifeways summarizes interaction among knappers and analysts, and the attempts to replicate specific artifact types represented. It is a unique volume in that it examines the variation present in technology and behavior across a wide range of Folsom localities.

Toward a Behavioral Ecology of Lithic Technology

Toward a Behavioral Ecology of Lithic Technology
Author: Todd A. Surovell
Publsiher: University of Arizona Press
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2012-02-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780816507382

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Modern humans and their hominid ancestors relied on chipped-stone technology for well over two million years and colonized more than 99 percent of the Earth's habitable landmass in doing so. Yet there currently exist only a handful of informal models derived from ethnographic observation, experiments, engineering, and "common sense" to explain variability in archaeological lithic assemblages. Because the fundamental processes of making, using, and discarding stone tools are, at root, exercises in problem solving, Todd Surovell asks what conditions favor certain technological solutions. Whether asking if a biface should be made thick or thin or if a flake should be saved or discarded, Surovell seeks answers that extend beyond a case-by-case analysis. One avenue for addressing these questions theoretically is formal mathematical modeling. Here Surovell constructs a series of models designed to link environmental variability to human decision making as it pertains to lithic technology. To test the models, Surovell uses data from the analysis of more than 40,000 artifacts from five Rocky Mountain and Northern Plains Folsom and Goshen complex archaeological sites dating to the Younger Dryas stadial (ca. 12,600-11,500 years BP). The primary result is the production of powerful new analytical tools useful to the interpretation of archaeological assemblages. Surovell's goal is to promote modeling and explore the general issues governing technological decisions. In this light, his models can be applied to any context in which stone tools are made and used.

A Dynamic View of Folsom Lithic Technology

A Dynamic View of Folsom Lithic Technology
Author: Andrew N. Zink
Publsiher: ProQuest
Total Pages: 79
Release: 2007
Genre: Antiquities, Prehistoric
ISBN: 0549216731

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Understanding Stone Tools and Archaeological Sites

Understanding Stone Tools and Archaeological Sites
Author: Brian Patrick Kooyman
Publsiher: UNM Press
Total Pages: 220
Release: 2000
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0826323332

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Covers manufacturing techniques, lithic types and materials, reduction strategies and techniques, worldwide lithic technology, production variables, meaning of form, and usewear and residue analysis.

Folsom Tools and Technology at the Hanson Site Wyoming

Folsom Tools and Technology at the Hanson Site  Wyoming
Author: George C. Frison,Bruce A. Bradley
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 192
Release: 1980
Genre: History
ISBN: STANFORD:36105036271711

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Lithic Technological Organization and Paleoenvironmental Change

Lithic Technological Organization and Paleoenvironmental Change
Author: Erick Robinson,Frédéric Sellet
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 341
Release: 2017-11-06
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9783319644073

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The objective of this edited volume is to bring together a diverse set of analyses to document how small-scale societies responded to paleoenvironmental change based on the evidence of their lithic technologies. The contributions bring together an international forum for interpreting changes in technological organization - embracing a wide range of time periods, geographic regions and methodological approaches.​ ​As technology brings more refined information on ancient climates, the research on spatial and temporal variability of paleoenvironmental changes. In turn, this has also broadened considerations of the many ways that prehistoric hunter-gatherers may have responded to fluctuations in resource bases. From an archaeological perspective, stone tools and their associated debitage provide clues to understanding these past choices and decisions, and help to further the investigation into how variable human responses may have been. Despite significant advances in the theory and methodology of lithic technological analysis, there have been few attempts to link these developments to paleoenvironmental research on a global scale.

Clovis Lithic Technology

Clovis Lithic Technology
Author: Michael R. Waters,Charlotte D. Pevny,David L. Carlson,Thomas A. Jennings
Publsiher: Texas A&M University Press
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2011-10-12
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781603442787

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Some 13,000 years ago, humans were drawn repeatedly to a small valley in what is now Central Texas, near the banks of Buttermilk Creek. These early hunter-gatherers camped, collected stone, and shaped it into a variety of tools they needed to hunt game, process food, and subsist in the Texas wilderness. Their toolkit included bifaces, blades, and deadly spear points. Where they worked, they left thousands of pieces of debris, which have allowed archaeologists to reconstruct their methods of tool production. Along with the faunal material that was also discarded in their prehistoric campsite, these stone, or lithic, artifacts afford a glimpse of human life at the end of the last ice age during an era referred to as Clovis. The area where these people roamed and camped, called the Gault site, is one of the most important Clovis sites in North America. A decade ago a team from Texas A&M University excavated a single area of the site—formally named Excavation Area 8, but informally dubbed the Lindsey Pit—which features the densest concentration of Clovis artifacts and the clearest stratigraphy at the Gault site. Some 67,000 lithic artifacts were recovered during fieldwork, along with 5,700 pieces of faunal material. In a thorough synthesis of the evidence from this prehistoric “workshop,” Michael R. Waters and his coauthors provide the technical data needed to interpret and compare this site with other sites from the same period, illuminating the story of Clovis people in the Buttermilk Creek Valley.