Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-24T00:27:03.816Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Reconsidering the Chronology: Carbonized Food Residue, Accelerator Mass Spectrometry Dates, and Compositional Analysis of a Curated Collection from the Upper Great Lakes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 June 2019

Susan M. Kooiman*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, Campus Box 1451, Edwardsville, Illinois 62026, USA
Heather Walder
Affiliation:
Department of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of Wisconsin–La Crosse, 1725 State Street, La Crosse, WI 54601, USA
*
([email protected], corresponding author)

Abstract

Recent reexamination of pottery, copper objects, and glass trade beads using modern analytic methods has amended the occupational history of the Cloudman site (20CH6), once interpreted as an early “Contact” period site in Michigan. The original chronology of the site, located on northern Michigan's Drummond Island in Lake Huron, was based on an apparent association of Iroquoian pottery with European-made trade goods relatively dated to circa AD 1630. Current advances in archaeological dating methods have revealed new insights into the poorly understood settlement patterns and social interactions of various Upper Great Lakes groups between AD 1300 and 1700. Accelerator mass spectrometry dating of carbonized food residue collected from late Late Woodland and Ontario Iroquoian pottery vessels suggests some contemporaneous use of both styles and the culmination of occupation by pottery-making groups by AD 1500. Elemental analysis of glass beads indicates that the recovered trade items were likely manufactured post–AD 1650. Likewise, compositional analysis of copper-base metal artifacts clarifies how such objects were made and used over time at the site. The results demonstrate how the application of modern analytic methods to curated collections can lead to significant reinterpretation, ultimately enhancing understandings of regional chronologies, social relationships, and population movements.

La reexaminación reciente de cerámica, objetos de cobre y cuentas de vidrio de intercambio usando métodos analíticos modernos ha modificado la historia ocupacional del sitio de Cloudman (20CH6), considerado con anterioridad como el sitio más temprano del periodo de “Contacto” en Michigan. Localizado en la isla Drummond, en el Lago Huron, al norte de Michigan, la cronología original del sitio estuvo basada en una aparente asociación de cerámica iroquesa con productos comerciales de fabricación europea fechados relativamente para el ca. 1630 dC. Avances recientes en los métodos de datación arqueológica han revelado nuevos conocimientos sobre los pobremente entendidos patrones de asentamiento y las interacciones sociales de varios grupos de los Grandes Lagos Superiores entre el 1300 y el 1700 dC. El fechamiento AMS de residuos de comida recolectados de las vasijas de cerámica de la faceta tardía del Woodland Tardío e Iroquesa Ontario sugiere un uso contemporáneo de ambos estilos y la culminación de la ocupación por parte de los grupos alfareros en el año 1500 dC. El análisis elemental de las cuentas de vidrio indica que los artículos de intercambio recuperados probablemente se manufacturaron después del año 1650 dC. Asimismo, el análisis composicional de los artefactos de metal de cobre clarifica como tales objetos fueron manufacturados y usados en el sitio a lo largo del tiempo. Los resultados demuestran como la aplicación de métodos analíticos modernos a colecciones curadas puede llevar a una reinterpretación significativa, lo que en última instancia mejora el entendimiento de las cronologías regionales, relaciones sociales y movimientos poblacionales.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2019 by 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

Allard, Amélie 2018 Gendered Mobilities: Performing Masculinities in the Late Eighteenth-Century Mobile Fur Trade Community. Ethnohistory 65:7599.Google Scholar
American Cultural Resources Association 2019 Best Practices for No-Collection Projects and In-Field Analysis. ACRAsphere (blog), February 7. Electronic document, https://acra-crm.org/acrasphere/7152557, accessed February 14, 2019.Google Scholar
Archaeological Collections Consortium 2019 Best Practices for No-Collection Projects and In-Field Analysis. SAA Archaeological Record 19(1):1014.Google Scholar
Bardolph, Dana N. 2014 Evaluating Cahokian Contact and Mississippian Identity Politics in the Prehistoric Central Illinois River Valley. American Antiquity 79:6989.Google Scholar
Bawaya, Michael 2007 Curation in Crisis. Science 317(5841):10251026.Google Scholar
Beck, Charlotte, and Jones, George T. 1994 On-Site Artifact Analysis as an Alternative to Collection. American Antiquity 59:304315.Google Scholar
Branstner, Christine N. 1992 National Register of Historic Places Archaeological Testing of 20CH6: A Multicomponent Site on Drummond Island, Michigan, 1991 Investigations. Report prepared for the Bureau of History, Michigan Department of State, Lansing.Google Scholar
Branstner, Christine N. 1995 Archaeological Investigations at the Cloudman Site (20CH6): A Multicomponent Native American Occupation on Drummond Island, Michigan, 1992 and 1994 Excavations. Report on file at the Consortium for Archaeological Research, Michigan State University, East Lansing.Google Scholar
Branstner, Susan M. 1992 Tionontate Huron Occupation at the Marquette Mission. In Calumet and Fleur-de-Lys: Archaeology of Indian and French Contact in the Midcontinent, edited by Walthall, John A. and Emerson, Thomas E., pp. 177201. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Brashler, Janet G., Garland, Elizabeth B., Holman, Margaret B., Lovis, William A., and Martin, Susan R. 2000 Adaptive Strategies and Socioeconomic Systems in Northern Great Lakes Riverine Environments: The Late Woodland of Michigan. In Late Woodland Societies: Tradition and Transformation across the Midcontinent, edited by Emerson, Thomas E., McElrath, Dale L., and Fortier, Andrew C., pp. 543582. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln.Google Scholar
Bratzel, M. P., Thompson, M. E., and Bowden, R. J. 1977 Waters of Lake Huron and Lake Superior: Vol. 2: Lake Huron, Georgian Bay, and the North Channel: Report to the International Joint Commission by the Upper Lakes Reference Group. International Joint Commission Digital Archive. Electronic document, Part A: https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/ijcarchive/135; Part B: https://scholar.uwindsor.ca/ijcarchive/136.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, Christopher, van der Plicht, Johannes, and Weninger, B. 2001Wiggle Matching” Radiocarbon Dates. Radiocarbon 43:381389.Google Scholar
Brose, David S. 1978 Late Prehistory of the Upper Great Lakes Area. In Northeast, edited by Trigger, B. G., pp. 569582. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 15, Sturtevant, William C., general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Brose, David S., and Hambacher, Michael J. 1999 The Middle Woodland in Northern Michigan. In Retrieving Michigan's Buried Past: The Archaeology of the Great Lakes State, edited by Halsey, John R., pp. 173192. Cranbrook Institute of Science, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.Google Scholar
Brown, James A., and Sasso, Robert F. 2001 Prelude to History on the Eastern Prairies. In Societies in Eclipse: Archaeology of the Eastern Woodland Indians A.D. 1400–1700, edited by Brose, David S., Cowan, C. Wesley, and Mainfort, Robert C. Jr., pp. 205228. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Butler, William B. 1979 The No-Collection Strategy in Archaeology. American Antiquity 44:795799.Google Scholar
Carter, Alison, Dussubieux, Laure, Polkinghorne, Martin, and Pottier, Christophe 2019 Glass Artifacts at Angkor: Evidence for Exchange. Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 11:10131027.Google Scholar
Cleland, Charles E. 1999 Cultural Transformation: The Archaeology of Historic Indian Sites in Michigan, 1670–1940. In Retrieving Michigan's Buried Past: The Archaeology of the Great Lakes State, edited by Halsey, John R., pp. 279290. Cranbrook Institute of Science, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.Google Scholar
Comstock, Aaron R. 2017 Climate Change, Migration, and the Emergence of Village Life on the Mississippian Periphery: A Middle Ohio Valley Case Study. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Ohio State University, Columbus.Google Scholar
Comstock, Aaron R., and Cook, Robert A. 2018 Climate Change and Migration along a Mississippian Periphery: A Fort Ancient Example. American Antiquity 83:91108.Google Scholar
Conway, Thor A. 1977 Whitefish Island: A Remarkable Archaeological Site at Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario. Ministry of Culture and Recreation, Historical Planning and Research Branch, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.Google Scholar
Conway, Thor A. 1988 The Providence Bay Site: An Ottawa Village on Manitoulin Island. Ms. on file, Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Culture and Recreation, Toronto.Google Scholar
Cook, Robert A., and Douglas Price, T. 2015 Maize, Mounds, and the Movement of People: Isotope Analysis of a Mississippian/Fort Ancient Region. Journal of Archaeological Science 61:112128.Google Scholar
Craig, Oliver E., Forster, M., Andersen, S. H., Koch, E., Crombé, P., Milner, N. J., Stern, B., Bailey, G. N., and Heron, C. P. 2007 Molecular and Isotopic Demonstration of the Processing of Aquatic Products in Northern European Prehistoric Pottery. Archaeometry 49:135152.Google Scholar
Craig, Oliver E., Saul, H., Lucquin, A., Nishida, Y., Taché, K., Clarke, L., Thompson, A., Altoft, D. T., Uchiyama, J., Ajimoto, M., Gibbs, K., Isaksson, S., Heron, C. P., and Jordan, P.. 2013 Earliest Evidence for the Use of Pottery. Nature 496:351354.Google Scholar
Dawson, Kenneth C. A. 1979 Algonkian Huron-Petun Ceramics in Northern Ontario. Man in the Northeast 18:1431.Google Scholar
Dunham, Sean B. 2014 Late Woodland Settlement and Subsistence Patterns in the Eastern Upper Peninsula of Michigan. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Michigan State University, East Lansing.Google Scholar
Dussubieux, Laure, Deraisme, Aurelie, Frot, Gerard, Stevenson, Christopher, Creech, Amy, and Bienvenu, Yves 2008 LA-ICP-MS, SEM-EDS, and EPMA Analysis of Eastern North American Copper-Based Artefacts: Impact of Corrosion and Heterogeneity on the Reliability of the LA-ICP-MS Compositional Results. Archaeometry 50:643657.Google Scholar
Dussubieux, Laure, and Walder, Heather 2015 Identifying American Native and European Smelted Coppers with pXRF: A Case Study of Artifacts from the Upper Great Lakes Region. Journal of Archaeological Science 59:169178.Google Scholar
Feest, Johanna E., and Feest, Christian F. 1978 Ottawa. In Northeast, edited by Trigger, B. G., pp. 772786. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 15, Sturtevant, William C., general editor, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Fischer, Anders, and Heinemeier, Jan 2003 Freshwater Reservoir Effect in 14C Dates of Food Residue on Pottery. Radiocarbon 45:449466.Google Scholar
Forde, Jamie E. 2017 Volcanic Glass and Iron Nails: Networks of Exchange and Material Entanglements at Late Prehispanic and Early Colonial Achiutla, Oaxaca, Mexico. International Journal of Historical Archaeology 21:485511.Google Scholar
Fox, William A. 1987 Dunk's Bay Archaeology. Kewa 87(9):28.Google Scholar
Fox, William A. 1990 The Odawa. In The Archaeology of Southern Ontario to A.D. 1650, edited by Ellis, Chris J. and Ferris, Neal, pp. 457473. Ontario Archaeological Society, London, Canada.Google Scholar
Fox, William A., and Garrad, Charles 2004 Hurons in an Algonquian Land. Ontario Archaeology 77/78:121134.Google Scholar
Gordon, Diana 2013 A Lake through Time: Archaeological and Palaeoenvironmental Investigations at Lake Temagami, 1985–1994. Ontario Archaeology 93:52158.Google Scholar
Hambacher, Michael J. 1992 The Skegemog Point Site: Continuing Studies in the Cultural Dynamics of the Carolinian-Canadian Transition Zone. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Michigan State University, East Lansing.Google Scholar
Hancock, Ronald G. V., Aufreiter, Susan, and Kenyon, Ian 1997 European White Glass Trade Beads as Chronological and Trade Markers. In Materials Issues in Art and Archaeology V, edited by Vandiver, Pamela, Druzick, James R., Merkel, John F., and Stewart, John, pp. 181191. Symposium Proceedings Vol. 462. Materials Research Society, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.Google Scholar
Hancock, Ronald G. V., Fox, William A., Conway, Thor, and Pavlish, Laurence A. 1993 Chemical Analysis of Archaeological Copper and Brass from Northeastern Ontario. Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry 168:307315.Google Scholar
Hancock, Ronald G. V., Pavlish, Laurence A., Farquhar, R. M., Salloum, R., Fox, William A., and Wilson, G. C. 1991 Distinguishing European Trade Copper and North-Eastern North American Native Copper. Archaeometry 33:6986.Google Scholar
Hancock, Ronald G. V., Pavlish, Laurence A., Fox, William A., and Latta, Martha A. 1995 Chemical Analysis of Copper Alloy Trade Metal from a Post-contact Huron Site in Ontario, Canada. Archaeometry 37:339350.Google Scholar
Hart, John P., and Lovis, William A. 2007 A Multi-regional Analysis of AMS and Radiometric Dates from Carbonized Food Residues. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 32:201261.Google Scholar
Hart, John P., Lovis, William A., Urquhart, Gerald R. and Reber, Eleanora A. 2013 Modeling Freshwater Reservoir Offsets on Radiocarbon-Dated Charred Cooking Residues. American Antiquity 78:536552.Google Scholar
Hart, John P., Taché, Karine, and Lovis, William A. 2018 Freshwater Reservoir Offsets and Food Crusts: Isotope, AMS, and Lipid Analyses of Experimental Cooking Residues. PLOS ONE 13(4): e0196407. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0196407.Google Scholar
Hawkins, Alicia L., Petrus, Joseph A., Anselmi, Lisa Marie, and Crawford, Gary 2016 Laser Ablation–Inductively Coupled Plasma–Mass Spectrometry Analysis of Copper-Based Artifacts from Southern Ontario and the Chronology of the Indirect Contact Period. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 6:332341.Google Scholar
Hayes, Katherine H., and Cipolla, Craig N. 2015 Introduction: Re-imagining Colonial Pasts, Influencing Colonial Futures. In Rethinking Colonialism: Comparative Archaeological Approaches, edited by Cipolla, Craig N. and Hayes, Katherine Howlett, pp. 113. University Press of Florida, Gainesville.Google Scholar
Heilen, Michael, and Altschul, Jeffery H. 2013 The Accuracy and Adequacy of In-Field Artifact Analysis: An Experimental Test at Two Archaeological Sites in the Western United States. Advances in Archaeological Practice 1:121138.Google Scholar
Hill, Mark A. 2012 Tracing Social Interaction: Perspectives on Archaic Copper Exchange from the Upper Great Lakes. American Antiquity 77:279292.Google Scholar
Janzen, Donald E. 1968 The Naomikong Point Site and the Dimensions of Laurel in the Lake Superior Basin. Anthropological Papers No. 36. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Keaveney, Evelyn M., and Reimer, Paula 2012 Understanding the Variability in Freshwater Radiocarbon Reservoir Offsets: A Cautionary Tale. Journal of Archaeological Science 39:13061316.Google Scholar
Keehner, Steven P., and Adair, Mary J. 2019 Modeling Kansas City Hopewell Developments and Regional Social Interactions: A Multisite Ceramic Analysis and New AMS Radiocarbon Ages. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 44:241.Google Scholar
Kennett, Douglas J., Culleton, Brendan J., Dexter, Jaime, Mensing, Scott A., and Thomas, David Hurst 2014 High-Precision AMS 14C Chronology for Gatecliff Shelter, Nevada. Journal of Archaeological Science 2:621632.Google Scholar
Kersel, Morag M. 2015 Storage Wars: Solving the Archaeological Curation Crisis? Journal of Eastern Mediterranean Archaeology and Heritage Studies 3:4254.Google Scholar
Kidd, Kenneth E., and Kidd, Martha A. 1970 A Classification System for Glass Beads for the Use of Field Archaeologists. In Canadian Historic Sites: Occasional Papers in Archaeology and History, No. 1. Department of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, Ottawa, Canada. Electronic document, http://parkscanadahistory.com/series/chs/1/chs1-2a.htm, accessed May 20, 2019.Google Scholar
Kooiman, Susan M. 2018 Multiproxy Analysis of Culinary, Technological, and Environmental Interactions in the Northern Great Lakes. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Michigan State University, East Lansing.Google Scholar
Kooiman, Susan M., Stephenson, Christine, and Dunham, Sean B. 2019 The Cloudman Site: A Multicomponent Woodland and Historic Period Site in the Upper Great Lakes. Wisconsin Archeologist, in press.Google Scholar
Lightfoot, Kent G. 1995 Culture Contact Studies: Redefining the Relationship between Prehistoric and Historical Archaeology. American Antiquity 60:199217.Google Scholar
Lightfoot, Kent G., Panich, Lee M., Schneider, Tsim D., Gonzalez, Sara L., Russell, Matthew A., Modzelewski, Darren, Molino, Theresa, and Blair, Elliot H. 2013 The Study of Indigenous Political Economies and Colonialism in Native California: Implications for Contemporary Tribal Groups and Federal Recognition. American Antiquity 78:89103.Google Scholar
Lovis, William A. 1973 Late Woodland Cultural Dynamics in the Northern Lower Peninsula of Michigan. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Michigan State University, East Lansing.Google Scholar
Lovis, William A. 1990 Curatorial Considerations for Systematic Research Collections: AMS Dating a Curated Ceramic Assemblage. American Antiquity 55:382387.Google Scholar
Lovis, William A. 2014 An Up North Fishing Trip: Reinvestigating the Absolute Dated Archaeological Chronology of Northern Lake Michigan. Paper presented at the Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, April 3.Google Scholar
Lovis, William A., and Hart, John P. 2015 Fishing for Dog Food: Ethnographic and Ethnohistoric Insights on the Freshwater Reservoir in Northeastern North America. Radiocarbon 57:557570.Google Scholar
McHale Milner, Claire 1998 Ceramic Style, Social Differentiation, and Resource Uncertainty in the Late Precontact Upper Great Lakes. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
McPherron, Alan L. 1967 The Juntunen Site and the Late Woodland Prehistory of the Upper Great Lakes Area. Anthropological Papers No. 30. Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.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):110.Google Scholar
Mason, Ronald J. 1986 Rock Island: Historical Indian Archaeology in the Northern Lake Michigan Basin. MCJA Special Paper No. 6. Kent State University Press, Kent, Ohio.Google Scholar
Mazrim, Robert F. 2011 Reconsidering the Antiquity of Trade on Madeline Island: The View from the Cadotte Site in Northern Wisconsin. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 36:2971.Google Scholar
Molnar, James S. 1997 Interpreting Fishing Strategies of the Odawa. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, State University of New York, Albany.Google Scholar
Morton, June D., and Schwarcz, Henry P. 2004 Paleodietary Implications from Stable Isotopic Analysis of Residues on Prehistoric Ontario Ceramics. Journal of Archaeological Science 31:503517.Google Scholar
O'Leary, Christopher G., and Bergman, Christopher A. 2005 Phase I Archaeological Survey of ca. 73 Acres for Kennecot Minerals Company, Eagle Project, Marquette County, Michigan. BHE Environmental, Cincinnati, Ohio. Report prepared for Golder Associates, Lakewood, Colorado. Archived by the Environmental Protection Agency. Electronic document, https://archive.epa.gov/r5water/uic/kennecott/web/pdf/kemc_nhpa_app_e.pdf, accessed November 1, 2018.Google Scholar
Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Menz, Martin, West, Shaun E., and Wallis, Neill J. 2018 A New History of Community Formation and Change at Kolomoki (9ER1). American Antiquity 83:320344.Google Scholar
Price, T. Douglas, Burton, James H., and Stoltman, James B. 2007 Place of Origin of Prehistoric Inhabitants of Aztalan, Jefferson Co., Wisconsin. American Antiquity 72:524538.Google Scholar
Reslewic, Susan, and Burton, James H. 2002 Measuring Lead Isotope Ratios in Majolica from New Spain Using a Nondestructive Technique. In Archaeological Chemistry, edited by Jakes, Kathryn A., pp. 3647. ACS Symposium Series Vol. 831. American Chemical Society, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Ritterbush, Lauren W. 2002 Drawn by the Bison: Late Prehistoric Native Migration in the Central Plains. Great Plains Quarterly 22:259270.Google Scholar
Ritterbush, Lauren W., and Logan, Brad 2000 Late Prehistoric Oneota Population Movement into the Central Plains. Plains Anthropologist 45:257272.Google Scholar
Rohrbaugh, Charles L., Stelle, Lenville J., Emerson, Thomas E., Walz, Gregory R., and Penman, John T. 1999 The Archaeology of the Grand Village of the Illinois. Report of the Grand Village Research Project, 1991–1996; Grand Village of the Illinois State Historic Site (11LS13), LaSalle County, Illinois. Illinois Transportation Archaeology Research Program, University of Illinois–Urbana.Google Scholar
Sanchez, Gabriel M., Rick, Torben C., Culleton, Brendan J., Kennett, Douglas J., Buckley, Michael, Erlandson, Jon M., and Losey, Robert L. 2018 Radiocarbon Dating Legacy Collections: A Bayesian Analysis of High-Precision AMS 14C Dates from the Par-Tee Site, Oregon. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 21:833848.Google Scholar
Schaepe, David M., Angelbeck, Bill, Snook, David, and Welch, John R. 2017 Archaeology as Therapy: Connecting Belongings, Knowledge, Time, Place, and Well-Being. Current Anthropology 58:502533.Google Scholar
Sempowski, Martha L., Nohe, A. W., Moreau, Jean-Francois, Kenyon, Ian, Karklins, Karlis, Aufreiter, Susan, and Hancock, Ronald G. V. 2000 On the Transition from Tin-Rich to Antimony-Rich European White Soda-Glass Trade Beads for the Senecas of Northeastern North America. Journal of Radioanalytical and Nuclear Chemistry 244:559566.Google Scholar
Silliman, Stephen 2005 Culture Contact or Colonialism? Challenges in the Archaeology of Native North America. American Antiquity 70:5574.Google Scholar
Slater, Philip A., Hedman, Kristin M., and Emerson, Thomas E. 2014 Immigrants at the Mississippian Polity of Cahokia: Strontium Isotope Evidence for Population Movement. Journal of Archaeological Science 44:117127.Google Scholar
Smith, Beverley A. 1996 System of Subsistence and Networks of Exchange in the Terminal Woodland and Early Historic Periods in the Upper Great Lakes. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Michigan State University, East Lansing.Google Scholar
Smith, Beverley A., and Prevec, Rosemary 2000 Economic Strategies and Community Patterning at the Providence Bay Site, Manitoulin Island. Ontario Archaeology 69:7691.Google Scholar
Stott, Andrew W., Berstan, Robert, and Evershed, Richard P. 2003 Direct Dating of Archaeological Pottery by Compound-Specific 14C Analysis of Preserved Lipids. Analytical Chemistry 75:50375045.Google Scholar
Stott, Andrew W., Berstan, Robert, Evershed, Richard P., Hedges, R. E. M., Bronk Ramsey, Christopher, and Humm, M. J. 2001 Radiocarbon Dating of Single Compounds Isolated from Pottery Cooking Vessel Residues. Radiocarbon 43:191197.Google Scholar
Stuiver, Minz, Reimer, Paula J., and Reimer, Ron W. 2018 CALIB 7.1. Electronic document, http://calib.org, accessed July 17, 2018.Google Scholar
Thwaites, Reuben Gold (editor) 2000 [1890] Jesuit Relations. 73 vols. Quintin, Pawtucket, Rhode Island.Google Scholar
Trabert, Sarah, Eiselt, Sunday, Hill, David V., Ferguson, Jeffrey, and Beck, Margaret 2017 Following a Glittering Trail: Geo-Chemical and Petrographic Characterization of Micaceous Sherds Recovered from Dismal River Sites. American Antiquity 81:364374.Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce G. 1976 The Children of Aataentsic: A History of the Huron People to 1660. McGill-Queen's University Press, Montreal, Canada.Google Scholar
Trigger, Bruce G. 1985 Natives and Newcomers: Canada's “Heroic Age” Reconsidered. McGill-Queen's University Press, Kingston, Canada.Google Scholar
Tubbs, Ryan M. 2013 Ethnic Identity and Diet in the Central Illinois River Valley. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, Michigan State University, East Lansing.Google Scholar
Tykot, Robert H. 2016 Using Nondestructive Portable X-ray Fluorescence Spectrometers on Stone, Ceramics, Metals, and Other Materials in Museums: Advantages and Limitations. Applied Spectroscopy 70:4256.Google Scholar
Voss, Barbara L. 2012 Curation as Research: A Case Study in Orphaned and Underreported Archaeological Collections. Archaeological Dialogues 19(2):145169.Google Scholar
Walder, Heather 2015 “…A Thousand Beads to Each Nation”: Exchange, Interactions, and Technological Practices in the Upper Great Lakes c. 1630–1730. PhD dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin–Madison.Google Scholar
Walder, Heather 2018 Small Beads, Big Picture: Chronology, Exchange, and Population Movement Assessed through Compositional Analyses of Blue Glass Beads from the Upper Great Lakes. Historical Archaeology 52:301331.Google Scholar
Walder, Heather 2019 Picking Up the Pieces: Intercultural Interaction in the Great Lakes Region Examined through Copper-Base Metal Artifacts. International Journal of Historical Archaeology 23:316342.Google Scholar
Walder, Heather, and Perry, Kayleigh 2018 Analysis of Copper-Base Metal Artifacts from Upper Michigan: A Student-Centered Research Project. Wisconsin Archeologist 99(1):177194.Google Scholar
Waters, Michael R., and Stafford, Thomas W. Jr. 2007 Redefining the Age of Clovis: Implications for the Peopling of the Americas. Science (n.s.) 315(5815):11221126.Google Scholar
White, Richard 1991 The Middle Ground: Indians, Empires and Republics in the Great Lakes Region, 1650–1815. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Whittington, Stephen L. 2017 Colonial Archives or Archival Colonialism? Documents Housed Outside of Mexico Are Inspiring Archaeological Research in Oaxaca. Advances in Archaeological Practice 5:265279.Google Scholar
Williamson, Ronald F., and MacDonald, Robert I. 2015 Echoes of the Iroquois Wars: Contested Heritage and Identity in the Ancestral Homeland of the Huron-Wendat. In Identity and Heritage: Contemporary Challenges in a Globalized World, edited by Biehl, Peter F., Comer, Douglas C., Prescott, Christpher, and Soderland, Hilary A., pp. 97106. Springer International, Cham, Switzerland.Google Scholar
Witgen, Michael 2012 An Infinity of Nations: How the Native New World Shaped Early North America. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia.Google Scholar
Wolf, Eric R. 1982 Europe and the People without History. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Wright, Gary A. 1967 Some Aspects of Early and Mid-17th Century Exchange Networks in the Western Great Lakes. Michigan Archaeologist 13(4):181197.Google Scholar
Wright, James V. 1967 The Laurel Tradition and the Middle Woodland Period. Bulletin 217, Anthropological Series 79. National Museum of Canada, Ottawa.Google Scholar
Yates, Andrea B., Smith, Andrew M., and Bertuch, F. 2015 Residue Radiocarbon AMS Dating Review and Preliminary Sampling Protocol Suggestions. Journal of Archaeological Science 61:223234.Google Scholar