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Microwear, microdrills, and Mississippian craft Specialization. Richard W. Yerkes

Por: Tipo de material: ArtículoArtículoIdioma: Inglés Series no.3 | Soociety for American Archaeology ; Detalles de publicación: Estados Unidos-US : Society for American Archaeology, 1983.Descripción: páginas 499-518: ilustraciones blanco y negroTema(s): En: Society for American Archaeology American Antiquity. Journal of the Society for American ArchaeologyResumen: Samples of microdrills, microblades, and microcores from the powell Mound and the Dunham tract of the Cahokia site near St. Louis and a small number of faketown perforators from the Poverty Point site, Lousiana, were examined for microwear traces, using the mthods outlined by L. H. Keeley. Many archaeologists have assumed that the microdrills in the Cahokia microlithic industry were used by craft specialists to produce drilled disc beads and other ittems made from marine and freshwater shell. Microwear analysis of the Cahokia microdrills showed they were specialized tools, used almost exclusively to drill shell material, while the jaketown perforators were used to drill a variety of materials. Existencias: 1
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Tipo de ítem Biblioteca actual Signatura topográfica Info Vol Copia número Estado Código de barras
Publicaciones Periodicas Extranjeras Publicaciones Periodicas Extranjeras Museo Nacional de Etnografía y Folklore Centro de procesamiento E/ AMER-ANT/ vol.48(3)/ Jul.1983 no.3 1 Disponible HEMREV035261

Samples of microdrills, microblades, and microcores from the powell Mound and the Dunham tract of the Cahokia site near St. Louis and a small number of faketown perforators from the Poverty Point site, Lousiana, were examined for microwear traces, using the mthods outlined by L. H. Keeley. Many archaeologists have assumed that the microdrills in the Cahokia microlithic industry were used by craft specialists to produce drilled disc beads and other ittems made from marine and freshwater shell. Microwear analysis of the Cahokia microdrills showed they were specialized tools, used almost exclusively to drill shell material, while the jaketown perforators were used to drill a variety of materials.

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