Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t8hqh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T08:59:08.697Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Pollen Analysis of Prehistoric Human Feces: A New Approach to Ethnobotany*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Paul S. Martin
Affiliation:
Geochronology Laboratories, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona
Floyd W. Sharrock
Affiliation:
University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah

Abstract

Prehistoric human and nonhuman feces from alcoves in the Glen Canyon region of southern Utah are a rich source of pollen and spores. The dominant pollen types (determined in a 200-grain pollen count) vary greatly from sample to sample, making stratigraphic and climatic interpretation very difficult. The record of economic plant pollen appears to reflect the prehistoric Pueblo diet. Cleome, Zea, Cucurbita, and Opuntia are the most abundant economic pollen types. Long-distance transport of pollen from distant montane forests will account for the presence of occasional pollen grains of spruce, fir, and alder in certain samples. The salvage and study of ancient human feces promises to reveal new information about the environment and diet of prehistoric man in the Southwest, a development of interest to both the ecologist and the ethnobotanist.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1964

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.)

Footnotes

*

Contribution No. 86, Program in Geochronology, University of Arizona.

References

Awasthi, Priti 1962 On the Morphology of the Pollen Grains of Two Species of Cucurbita L. Pollen et Spores, Vol. 4, No. 2, pp. 263–8. Paris.Google Scholar
Bent, Anne M. and Wright, H. E. Jr. 1963 Pollen Analysis of Surface Materials and Lake Sediments from the Chuska Mountains, New Mexico. Geological Society of America Bulletin, Vol. 74, pp. 491500. New York.Google Scholar
Bernheimer, Charles E. 1929 Diary of Charles Bernheimer from Seventh Expedition. Unpublished manuscript, Department of Archaeology, American Museum of Natural History, New York.Google Scholar
Cain, Stanley A. 1944 Foundations of Plant Geography. Harper & Brothers, New York and London.Google Scholar
Castetter, E. F. and Bell, W. H. 1942 Pima and Papago Indian Agriculture. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Davis, Margaret Bryan and Goodlett, John C. 1960 Comparison of the Present Vegetation with Pollen-Spectra in Surface Samples from Brownington Pond, Vermont. Ecology, Vol. 41, No. 2, pp. 346–57. Durham.Google Scholar
Elmore, Francis H. 1944 Ethnobotany of the Navajo. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque.Google Scholar
Erdtman, Gunnar 1954 An Introduction to Pollen Analysis. Verdoorn, Waltham. Chronica Botanica, 2nd reprinting.Google Scholar
Faegri, Knut and Iversen, Johs 1964 Text-Book of Pollen Analysis. Hafner Publishing Company, New York.Google Scholar
Fowler, Don D. 1959 The Glen Canyon Archeological Survey. University of Utah Anthropological Papers, No. 39, Glen Canyon Series, No. 6, Part III. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Hafsten, ULF 1961 Pleistocene Development of Vegetation and Climate in the Southern High Plains as Evidenced by Pollen Analysis. In Paleoecology of the Llano Estacado, edited by Wendorf, Fred, pp. 5991. Museum of New Mexico Press, Sante Fe.Google Scholar
Hill, W. W. 1938 The Agricultural and Hunting Methods of the Navajo Indians. Yale University Publications in Anthropology, Vol. 18, No. 3, pp. 1194. New Haven.Google Scholar
Lance, John F. 1963 Alluvial Stratigraphy in Lake and Moqui Canyons. In Sharrock and others, 1962 Excavations, Glen Canyon Area. University of Utah Anthropological Papers, No. 63, Glen Canyon Series, No. 18, pp. 347-76. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Laudermilk, J. D. and Munz, P. A. 1938 Plants in the Dung of Nothrotherium from Rampart and Muave Caves, Arizona. Carnegie Institution of Washington, Publication 487, pp. 271–81. Washington.Google Scholar
Leopold, Luna B., Leopold, Estella B., and Wendorf, Fred 1963 Some Climatic Indication in the Period A.D. 1200-1400 in New Mexico. Arid Zone Research, Vol. 20, pp. 265–70. Paris.Google Scholar
Lipe, William D. 1960 1958 Excavations, Glen Canyon Area. University of Utah Anthropological Papers, No. 44, Glen Canyon Series, No. 11. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Martin, Paul S. 1963 The Last 10,000 Years: A Fossil Pollen Record of the American Southwest. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Martin, Paul S. and Byers, William n.d. Pollen and Archaeology at Wetherill Mesa, Colorado. Manuscript on file, University of Arizona Geochronology Laboratories, Tucson.Google Scholar
Martin, Paul S., Sabels, Bruno E., and Shutler, Richard Jr. 1961 Rampart Cave Coprolite and Ecology of the Shasta Ground Sloth. American Journal of Science, Vol. 259, pp. 102–27. New Haven.Google Scholar
Parsons, Elsie 1939 Pueblo Indian Religion. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Potter, Loren D. and Rowley, Joan 1960 Pollen Rain and Vegetation, San Augustin Plains, New Mexico. Botanical Gazette, Vol. 122, No. 1, pp. 125. Chicago.Google Scholar
Robbins, Wilfred, Harrington, John P., and Freire-Marreco, Barbara 1916 Ethnobotany of the Tewa Indians. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 55. Washington.Google Scholar
Sharrock, Floyd W. and Others 1961 1960 Excavations, Glen Canyon Area, University of Utah Anthropological Papers, No. 52, Glen Canyon Series, No. 14. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Sharrock, Floyd W., C. Day, Kent, and Dibble, David S. 1963 1961 Excavations, Glen Canyon Area. University of Utah Anthropological Papers, No. 63, Glen Canyon Series, No. 18. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Standley, Paul C. 1911 Some Useful Native Plants of New Mexico. Annual Reports of the Smithsonian Institution, pp. 447-63. Washington.Google Scholar
Steggerda, Morris and Eckardt, Ruth B. 1941 Navajo Foods and Their Preparation. American Dietetic Association Journal, Vol. 17, pp. 217–25. Chicago.Google Scholar
Stevenson, Matilda C. 1915 Ethnobotany of the Zuni Indians. Thirteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology, pp. 31-102. Washington.Google Scholar
White, Leslie A. 1944 Notes on the Ethnobotany of the Keres. Papers of the Michigan Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters, Vol. 30, pp. 557–70. Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
White, Leslie A. 1962 The Pueblo of Sia, New Mexico. Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin 184, Washington.Google Scholar
Whiting, Alfred F. 1950 Ethnobotany of the Hopi. Museum of Northern Arizona Bulletin, No. 15. Flagstaff.Google Scholar
Wodehouse, R. B. 1935 Pollen. Grains, Their Structure, Identification, and Significance in Science and Medicine. McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc. Reprinted, 1959, Hafner Publishing Company, New York.Google Scholar
Woodbury, Angus M., Durrant, Stephen D., and Flowers, Seville 1959 Survey of Vegetation in the Glen Canyon Reservoir Basin. University of Utah Anthropological Papers, No. 36, Glen Canyon Series, No. 5. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Woodbury, Angus M. and Others 1958 Preliminary Report on Biological Resources of the Glen Canyon Reservoir. University of Utah Anthropological Papers, No. 31, Glen Canyon Series, No. 2. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Woodbury, Angus M. 1959 Ecological Studies of the Flora and Fauna in Glen Canyon. University of Utah Anthropological Papers, No. 40, Glen Canyon Series, No. 7. Salt Lake City.Google Scholar
Wyman, L. C. and Harris, S. K 1951 The Ethnobotany of the Kayenta Navaho. University of New Mexico Publications in Biology, No. 5. Albuquerque.Google Scholar