Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T09:37:38.092Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Conflict, Population Movement, and Microscale Social Networks in Northern Iroquoian Archaeology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 April 2021

Jennifer Birch
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, 250 Baldwin Hall, Jackson Street, Athens, GA30602-1619, USA ([email protected]).
John P. Hart*
Affiliation:
Research and Collections Division, New York State Museum, 3140 Cultural Education Center, Albany, NY12230, USA
*
([email protected], corresponding author).

Abstract

We employ social network analysis of collar decoration on Iroquoian vessels to conduct a multiscalar analysis of signaling practices among ancestral Huron-Wendat communities on the north shore of Lake Ontario. Our analysis focuses on the microscale of the West Duffins Creek community relocation sequence as well as the mesoscale, incorporating several populations to the west. The data demonstrate that network ties were stronger among populations in adjacent drainages as opposed to within drainage-specific sequences, providing evidence for west-to-east population movement, especially as conflict between Wendat and Haudenosaunee populations escalated in the sixteenth century. These results suggest that although coalescence may have initially involved the incorporation of peoples from microscale (local) networks, populations originating among wider mesoscale (subregional) networks contributed to later coalescent communities. These findings challenge previous models of village relocation and settlement aggregation that oversimplified these processes.

Nous employons une analyse des réseaux sociaux de la décoration des collets de vases iroquoiens pour réaliser une analyse multi-scalaire de signalisation des pratiques au sein des communautés ancestrales Huron-Wendat sur la rive nord du lac Ontario. Notre analyse met l'accent sur la micro-échelle ainsi que la méso-échelle de la séquence de réinstallation de la communauté de West Duffins Creek, incorporant plusieurs populations à l'ouest. Les données montrent que les liens tissés au sein du réseau étaient plus solides chez les populations dans les bassins hydrographiques adjacents qu'au sein des séquences spécifiques au bassin, prouvant un mouvement de population d'ouest en est, alors que le conflit entre les peuples Wendat et Haudenosaunee s'aggravait au seizième siècle. Ces résultats suggèrent que bien que la coalescence puisse avoir au départ impliqué l'incorporation de peuples en provenance de petits réseaux (locaux), les populations originaires de réseaux plus larges (sous-régionaux) ont contribué à une coalescence ultérieure des communautés. Ces résultats remettent en cause les modèles précédents de réinstallation et de regroupement des villages qui simplifiaient trop ces procédés.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Society for American Archaeology

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

Allen, Kathleen M. S. 1988 Ceramic Style and Social Continuity in an Iroquoian Tribe. PhD dissertation, Anthropology Department, University of Buffalo, Buffalo, New York.Google Scholar
ASI (Archaeological Services Inc.) 2014 The Archaeology of the Mantle Site (AlGt-334). A Report on the Stage 3–4 Salvage Excavation of the Mantle Site (AlGt-334), Part of Lot 33, Concession 9, Town of Whitchurch-Stouffville, Regional Municipality of York, Ontario. Report on file at the Ontario Ministry of Culture, Toronto.Google Scholar
Bernardini, Wesley R. 2011 Migration in Fluid Social Landscapes. In Rethinking Anthropological Perspectives on Migration, edited by Cabana, Graciela S. and Clark, Jeffery J., pp. 3144. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Biggar, Henry P. (editor) 1922–1936 The Works of Samuel de Champlain. 6 vols. Champlain Society, Toronto.Google Scholar
Birch, Jennifer 2012 Coalescent Communities: Settlement Aggregation and Social Integration in Iroquoian Ontario. American Antiquity 77:646670. DOI:10.7183/0002-7316.77.4.646.Google Scholar
Birch, Jennifer 2015 Current Research on the Historical Development of Northern Iroquoian Societies. Journal of Archaeological Research 23:263323. DOI:10.1007/s10814-015-9082-3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birch, Jennifer 2019 Settlement Aggregation and Geopolitical Realignment in the Northeastern Woodlands. In Coming Together: Comparative Approaches to Population Aggregation and Early Urbanization, edited by Gyucha, Attila, pp. 349368. State University of New York Press, Albany.Google Scholar
Birch, Jennifer, and Hart, John P. 2018 Social Networks and Northern Iroquoian Confederacy Dynamics. American Antiquity 83:1333. DOI:10.1017/aaq.2017.5.Google Scholar
Birch, Jennifer, and Lesage, Louis 2020 When Detachment Is Not Complete: Emplacement and Displacement in Ancestral Huron-Wendat Landscapes. In Detachment from Place: Beyond an Archaeology of Settlement Abandonment, edited by Lamoureux-St-Hilaire, Maxime and Macrae, Scott, pp. 4562. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Birch, Jennifer, Manning, Sturt W., Sanft, Samantha, and Conger, Megan Anne 2021 Refined Radiocarbon Chronologies for Northern Iroquoian Site Sequences: Implications for Coalescence, Conflict, and the Reception of European Goods. American Antiquity 86:61–89. DOI:10.1017/aaq.2020.73.Google Scholar
Birch, Jennifer, and Williamson, Ronald F. 2013 The Mantle Site: An Archaeological History of an Ancestral Wendat Community. AltaMira Press, Lanham, Maryland.Google Scholar
Birch, Jennifer, and Williamson, Ronald F. 2018 Initial Northern Iroquoian Coalescence. In The Archaeology of Villages in Eastern North America, edited by Birch, Jennifer and Thompson, Victor D., pp. 89105. University of Florida Press, Gainesville.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bliege Bird, Rebecca, and Smith, Eric Alden 2005 Signaling Theory, Strategic Interaction, and Symbolic Capital. Current Anthropology 46:221248. DOI:10.1086/427115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blondel, Vincent D., Guillaume, Jean-Loup, Lambiotte, Renaud, and Lefebvre, Étienne 2008 Fast Unfolding of Communities in Large Networks. Journal of Statistical Mechanics: Theory and Experiment 10:P10008. DOI:10.1088/1742-5468/2008/10/P10008.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Borck, Lewis, Mills, Barbara J., Peeples, Matthew A., and Clark, Jeffery J. 2015 Are Social Networks Survival Networks? An Example from the Late Pre-Hispanic US Southwest. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 22:3357. DOI:10.1007/s10816-014-9236-5.Google Scholar
Bowser, Brenda J. 2000 From Pottery to Politics: An Ethnoarchaeological Study of Political Factionalism, Ethnicity, and Domestic Pottery Style in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 7:219248. DOI:10.1023/A:1026510620824.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowser, Brenda J., and Patton, John Q. 2004 Domestic Spaces as Public Places: An Ethnoarchaeological Case Study of Houses, Gender, and Politics in the Ecuadorian Amazon. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 11:157181. DOI:10.1023/B:JARM.0000038065.43689.75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bradley, James W. 1987 Evolution of the Onondaga Iroquois, Accommodating Change, 1500–1655. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse, New York.Google Scholar
Brandes, Ulrik, and Wagner, Dorothea 2004 Analysis and Visualization of Social Networks. In Graph Drawing Software, edited by Jünger, Michael and Mutzel, Petra, pp. 321340. Springer-Verlag, Berlin.Google Scholar
Braun, Gregory 2015 Ritual, Materiality, and Memory in an Iroquoian Village. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto, Toronto.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, Christopher 2009a Bayesian Analysis of Radiocarbon Dates. Radiocarbon 51:337360. DOI:10.1017/S0033822200033865.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, Christopher 2009b Dealing with Outliers and Offsets in Radiocarbon Dating. Radiocarbon 51:10231045. DOI:10.1017/S0033822200034093.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brughmans, Tom 2013 Thinking Through Networks: A Review of Formal Network Methods in Archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 20:623662. DOI:10.1007/s10816-012-9133-8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carr, Christopher 1995 A Unified Middle-Range Theory of Artifact Design. In Style, Society, and Person: Archaeological and Ethnological Perspectives, edited by Carr, Christopher and Neitzel, Jill E., pp. 171258. Plenum Press, New York.Google Scholar
Chilton, Elizabeth S. 1996 Embodiments of Choice: Native American Ceramic Diversity in the New England Interior. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst.Google Scholar
Curtis, Jenneth E., and Latta, Martha A. 2000 Ceramics as Reflectors of Social Relationship: The Auger Site and Ball Site Castellations. Ontario Archaeology 70:115.Google Scholar
Dee, Michael W., and Ramsey, Christopher Bronk 2014 High-Precision Bayesian Modeling of Samples Susceptible to Inbuilt Age. Radiocarbon 56:8394. DOI:10.2458/56.16685.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dee, Michael W., Wengrow, David, Shortland, Andrew, Stevenson, Alice, Brock, Fiona, Flink, Linus Girdland, and Ramsey, Christopher Bronk 2013 An Absolute Chronology for Early Egypt Using Radiocarbon Dating and Bayesian Statistical Modelling. Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical, and Engineering Sciences 469(2159):20130395. DOI:10.1098/rspa.2013.0395.Google ScholarPubMed
Emerson, John Norman 1954 The Archaeology of the Ontario Iroquois. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Chicago, Chicago.Google Scholar
Engelbrecht, William 2003 Iroquoia: The Development of a Native World. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse, New York.Google Scholar
Finlayson, William D. 1985 1975 and 1978 Rescue Excavations at the Draper Site: Introduction and Settlement Patterns. University of Ottawa Press, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Gramly, Richard Michael 1977 Deerskins and Hunting Territories: Competition for a Scarce Resource of the Northeastern Woodlands. American Antiquity 42:601605. DOI:10.2307/278933.Google Scholar
Hammer, Øyvind, Harper, David A. T., and Ryan, Paul D. 2001 PAST: Paleontological Statistics Software Package for Education and Data Analysis. Palaeontologia Electronica 4:9. Electronic document, https://palaeo-electronica.org/2001_1/past/issue1_01.htm, accessed February 11, 2021.Google Scholar
Harry, Karen G., and Herr, Sarah A. (editors) 2018 Life beyond the Boundaries: Constructing Identity in Edge Regions of the North American Southwest. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hart, John P. 2020 Reassessing an Inferred Village Removal Sequence in the Proto-Historic Mohawk River Basin, New York, USA. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 60:101236. DOI:10.1016/j.jaa.2020.101236.Google Scholar
Hart, John P., Birch, Jennifer, and St. Pierre, Christian Gates 2017 Effects of Population Dispersal on Regional Signaling Networks: An Example from Northern Iroquoia. Science Advances 3(8). DOI:10.1126/sciadv.1700497.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hart, John P., and Engelbrecht, William 2012 Northern Iroquoian Ethnic Evolution: A Social Network Analysis. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 19:322349. DOI:10.1007/s10816-011-9116-1.Google Scholar
Hart, John P., and Engelbrecht, William 2017 Revisiting Onondaga Iroquois Prehistory through Social Network Analysis. In Process and Meaning in Spatial Archaeology: Investigations into Pre-Columbian Iroquoian Space and Place, edited by Jones, Eric E. and Creese, John L., pp. 189214. University Press of Colorado, Boulder.Google Scholar
Hart, John P., Shafie, Termeh, Birch, Jennifer, Dermarker, Susan, and Williamson, Ronald 2016 Nation Building and Social Signaling in Southern Ontario, A.D. 1350–1650. PLoS ONE 11(5):e0156178. DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0156178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hart, John P., Winchell-Sweeney, Susan, and Birch, Jennifer 2019 An Analysis of Network Brokerage and Geographic Location in Fifteenth-Century AD Northern Iroquoia. PLoS ONE 14(1):e0209689. DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0209689.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hawkins, Alicia L. 2004 Recreating Home? A Consideration of Refugees, Microstyles and Frilled Pottery in Huronia. Ontario Archaeology 77–78:6280.Google Scholar
Hawkins, Alicia L., Malleau, Kaitlyn, and Elliott, Deirdre 2018 A Consideration of Participants in Huron-Wendat Subsistence Strategies across the Pre-Contact and Early Colonization Periods. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 20:873880. DOI:10.1016/j.jasrep.2017.10.024.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hill, Mark A., Nolan, Kevin C., and Seeman, Mark S. 2020 Social Network Analysis and the Social Interactions That Define Hopewell. In Archaeological Networks and Social Interaction, edited by Donnellan, Lieve, pp. 173195. Routledge, New York.Google Scholar
Jones, Eric E., and Wood, James W. 2012 Using Event-History Analysis to Examine the Causes of Semi-Sedentism among Shifting Cultivators: A Case Study of the Haudenosaunee, AD 1500–1700. Journal of Archaeological Science 39:25932603. DOI:10.1016/j.jas.2012.04.019.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kenyon, Ian T., and Kenyon, Thomas A. 1983 Comments on 17th Century Glass Trade Beads from Ontario. In Proceedings of the 1982 Glass Trade Bead Conference, edited by Hayes, Charles F. III, pp. 5974. Research Records No. 16. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester, New York.Google Scholar
Kintigh, Keith 2010 Tools for Quantitative Archaeology. Electronic document, http://tfqa.com/doc, accessed May 26, 2020.Google Scholar
Ladefoged, Thegn N., Gemmell, Caleb, McCoy, Mark, Jorgensen, Alex, Glover, Hayley, Stevenson, Christopher, and O'Neale, Dion 2019 Social Network Analysis of Obsidian Artefacts and Māori Interaction in Northern Aotearoa New Zealand. PLoS ONE 14(3):e0212941. DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0212941.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lulewicz, Jacob 2019 The Social Networks and Structural Variation of Mississippian Sociopolitics in the Southeastern United States. PNAS 116:67076712. DOI:10.1073/pnas.1818346116.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lulewicz, Jacob, and Coker, Adam B. 2018 The Structure of the Mississippian World: A Social Network Approach to the Organization of Sociopolitical Interactions. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 50:113127. DOI:10.1016/j.jaa.2018.04.003.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
MacDonald, Robert I. 2002 Late Woodland Settlement Trends in South-Central Ontario: A Study of Ecological Relationships and Culture Change. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, McGill University, Montreal.Google Scholar
Manning, Sturt W., Birch, Jennifer, Conger, Megan Anne, Dee, Michael W., Griggs, Carol, and Hadden, Carla S. 2019 Contact-Era Chronology Building in Iroquoia: Age Estimates for Arendarhonon Sites and Implications for Identifying Champlain's Cahiagué. American Antiquity 84:684707. DOI:10.1017/aaq.2019.60.Google Scholar
Manning, Sturt W., Birch, Jennifer, Conger, Megan A., Dee, Michael W., Griggs, Carol, Hadden, Carla S., Hogg, Alan G., Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Sanft, Samantha, Steier, Peter, and Wild, Eva M. 2018 Radiocarbon Re-Dating of Contact-Era Iroquoian History in Northeastern North America. Science Advances 4(12). DOI:10.1126/sciadv.aav0280.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Martelle, Holly 2002 Huron Potters and Archaeological Constructs: Researching Ceramic Microstylistics. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Toronto, Toronto.Google Scholar
Martelle, Holly 2004 Some Thoughts on the Impact of Epidemic Disease and European Contact on Ceramic Production in Seventeenth Century Huronia. Ontario Archaeology 77–78:2244.Google Scholar
Mills, Barbara J. 2017 Social Network Analysis in Archaeology. Annual Review of Anthropology 46:379397. DOI:10.1146/annurev-anthro-102116-041423.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mills, Barbara J., Peeples, Matthew A., Haas, W. Randall Jr., Borck, Lewis, Clark, Jeffery J., and Roberts, John M. Jr. 2015 Multiscalar Perspectives on Social Networks in the Late Prehispanic Southwest. American Antiquity 80:324. DOI:10.7183/0002-7316.79.4.3.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mizoguchi, Koji 2013 Evolution of Prestige Good Systems: An Application of Network Analysis to the Transformation of Communication Systems and Their Media. In Network Analysis in Archaeology: New Approaches to Regional Interaction, edited by Knappett, Carl, pp. 151178. Oxford University Press, Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Niemczycki, Mary Ann Palmer 1984 The Origin and Development of the Seneca and Cayuga Tribes of New York State. Research Records No. 17. Rochester Museum and Science Center, Rochester, New York.Google Scholar
Peeples, Matthew A. 2018 Connected Communities: Networks, Identity, and Social Change in the Ancient Cibola World. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Peeples, Matthew A. 2019 Finding a Place for Networks in Archaeology. Journal of Archaeological Research 27:451499. DOI:10.1007/s10814-019-09127-8.Google Scholar
Peregrine, Peter 1991 A Graph-Theoretic Approach to the Evolution of Cahokia. American Antiquity 56:6675. DOI:10.2307/280973.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perrelli, Douglas J. 2009 Iroquoian Social Organization in Practice: A Small-Scale Study of Gender Roles and Site Formation in Western New York. In Iroquoian Archaeology and Analytic Scale, edited by Miroff, Laurie E. and Knapp, Timothy D., pp. 1950. University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville.Google Scholar
Pfeiffer, Susan, Williamson, Ronald F., Newton, Jennifer, le Roux, Petrus, Forrest, Crystal, and Lesage, Louis 2020 Population Movements of the Huron-Wendat Viewed through Strontium Isotope Analysis. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 33:102466. DOI:10.1016/j.jasrep.2020.10246.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ramsden, Peter G. 1977 A Refinement of Some Aspects of Huron Ceramic Analysis. National Museum of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario.Google Scholar
Ramsden, Peter G. 2009 Politics in a Huron Village. In Painting the Past with a Broad Brush: Papers in Honour of James Valliere Wright, edited by Keenlyside, David and Pilon, Jean-Luc, pp. 299318. Mercury Series Archaeology Paper 170. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Gatineau, Quebec.Google Scholar
Ramsden, Peter G. 2016 Becoming Wendat: Negotiating a New Identity around Balsam Lake in the Late Sixteenth Century. Ontario Archaeology 96:121133. https://www.ontarioarchaeology.org/resources/Publications/OA96-11%20Ramsden.pdf, accessed February 11, 2021.Google Scholar
Reimer, Paula, Bard, Edouard, Bayliss, Alex, Warren Beck, J., Blackwell, Paul G., Ramsey, Christopher Bronk, Buck, Caitlin E., Cheng, Hai, Lawrence Edwards, R., Friedrich, Michael, Grootes, Pieter M., Guilderson, Thomas P., Haflidason, Haflidi, Hajdas, Irka, Hatté, Christine, Heaton, Timothy J., Hoffman, Dirk L., Hogg, Alan G., Hughen, Konrad A., Felix Kaiser, K., Kromer, Bernd, Manning, Sturt W., Niu, Mu, Reimer, Ron W., Richards, David A., Marian Scott, E., Southon, John R., Staff, Richard A., Turney, Christian S. M., and van der Plicht, Johannes 2013 IntCal13 and Marine13 Radiocarbon Age Calibration Curves 0–50,000 Years cal BP. Radiocarbon 55:18691887. DOI:10.2458/azu_js_rc.55.16947.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ritchie, William A., and Funk, Robert E. 1973 Aboriginal Settlement Patterns in the Northeast. New York State Museum Memoir 20. University of the State of New York, Albany.Google Scholar
Rorabaugh, Adam N. 2019 Hunting Social Networks on the Salish Sea before and after the Bow and Arrow. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 23:822843. DOI:10.1016/j.jasrep.2018.11.040.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schachner, Gregson 2012 Population Circulation and the Transformation of Ancient Zuni Communities. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.Google Scholar
Sioui, Georges 1999 Huron-Wendat: The Heritage of the Circle. UBC Press, Vancouver.Google Scholar
Sioui, Georges 2019 Eatenonhia: Native Roots of Modern Democracy. McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal.Google Scholar
Smith, Michael E. 2014 Peasant Mobility, Local Migration and Premodern Urbanization. World Archaeology 46:516533. DOI:10.1080/00438243.2014.931818.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Michael E., Feinman, Gary M., Drennan, Robert D., Earle, Timothy, and Morris, Ian 2012 Archaeology as a Social Science. PNAS 109:76177621. DOI:10.1073/pnas.1201714109.Google ScholarPubMed
Snow, Dean R. 1994 The Iroquois. Blackwell Publishers, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Thwaites, Reuben G. 1896–1901 The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents. 73 vols. Burrows Brothers, Cleveland.Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce G. 1976 The Children of Aataentsic: A History of the Huron People to 1660. McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal.Google Scholar
Tuck, James A. 1971 Onondaga Iroquois Prehistory: A Study in Settlement Archaeology. Syracuse University Press, Syracuse, New York.Google Scholar
Warrick, Gary A. 1988 Estimating Ontario Iroquoian Village Duration. Man in the Northeast 36:2160.Google Scholar
Warrick, Gary A. 2008 A Population History of the Huron-Petun, AD 500–1650. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Williamson, Ronald F. 2014 The Archaeological History of the Wendat to AD 1651: An Overview. Ontario Archaeology 94:364. https://www.ontarioarchaeology.org/resources/Publications/OA%20No%2094%20Journal_2014.pdf#page9, accessed February 11, 2021.Google Scholar
Williamson, Ronald F., Burchell, Megan, Fox, William A., and Grant, Sarah 2016 Looking Eastward: Fifteenth- and Early Sixteenth-Century Exchange Systems of the North Shore Ancestral Wendat. In Contact in the 16th Century: Networks among Fishers, Foragers, and Farmers, edited by Loewen, Brad and Chapdelaine, Claude, pp. 235256. Mercury Series Archaeological Paper 176. Canadian Museum of History, Gatineau; University of Ottawa Press, Ottawa.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Williamson, Ronald F., Cooper, Martin S., and Robertson, David A. 1998 The 1989–90 Excavations at the Parsons Site: Introduction and Retrospect. Ontario Archaeology 65:416.Google Scholar
Wrong, George M. (editor) 1939 Sagard's Long Journey to the Country of the Hurons. Champlain Society, Toronto.Google Scholar
Wylie, Alison 2017 How Archaeological Evidence Bites Back: Strategies for Putting Old Data to Work in New Ways. Science, Technology, and Human Values 42:203225. DOI:10.1177%2F0162243916671200.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Supplementary material: File

Birch and Hart supplementary material

Figure S1 and Tables S1-S9
Download Birch and Hart supplementary material(File)
File 508.3 KB