11 research outputs found

    Dining with John and Catharine Butler before the Close of the Eighteenth Century

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    The partial excavation of the homestead of Colonel John Butler in the town of Niagara-on-the-Lake has afforded the opportunity to explore the daily activities of one Loyalist family after the establishment of the British colony of Upper Canada in the 1780s. In particular, the large collection of zooarchaeological material (over 14,5000 specimens) can provide information about the availability of wild animal species, as well as the types of domestic animals that the Butlers kept on their farm. Butchering marks provide further insight into the types of meat cuts used in cooking meals for the family and guests. These are compared and contrasted with the ceramic and glass vessels, so that these analyses can be brought together to paint a picture of what it might have been like to dine with John and Catharine Butler before the close of the 18th century

    Isotopic Evidence for Garden Hunting and Resource Depression in the Late Woodland of Northeastern North America

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    Resource depression and garden hunting are major topics of archaeological interest, with important implications for understanding cultural and environmental change. Garden hunting is difficult to study using traditional zooarchaeological approaches, but isotopic analyses of animals may provide a marker for where and when people exploited nondomesticated animals that fed on agricultural resources. To realize the full potential of isotopic approaches for reconstructing garden hunting practices—and the impacts of agriculture on past nondomesticated animal populations more broadly—a wider range of species, encompassing many “ecological perspectives,” is needed. We use bone-collagen isotopic compositions of animals (n = 643, 23 taxa, 39 sites) associated with the Late Woodland (~AD 900−1650) in what is now southern Ontario to test hypotheses about the extent to which animals used maize, an isotopically distinctive plant central to subsistence practices of Iroquoian-speaking peoples across the region. Results show that although some taxa—particularly those that may have been hard to control—had substantial access to maize, most did not, regardless of the animal resource requirements of local populations. Our findings suggest that this isotopic approach to detecting garden hunting will be more successful when applied to smaller-scale societies.Le dĂ©clin des ressources et la chasse en milieux cultivĂ©s sont des sujets d'un grand intĂ©rĂȘt archĂ©ologique, avec des implications importantes pour la comprĂ©hension des changements culturels et environnementaux. La chasse en milieux cultivĂ©s est difficile Ă  Ă©tudier en utilisant des approches zooarchĂ©ologiques traditionnelles, mais les analyses isotopiques des animaux peuvent fournir un marqueur pour savoir oĂč et quand les gens exploitaient des animaux non-domestiquĂ©s qui se nourrissaient de produits agricoles. Pour entrevoir le plein potentiel des approches isotopiques pour reconstruire les pratiques de chasse dans les milieux cultivĂ©s — et les impacts de l'agriculture sur les populations animales non-domestiquĂ©es du passĂ© de maniĂšre plus large — un plus large Ă©ventail d'espĂšces, englobant de nombreuses « perspectives Ă©cologiques », est nĂ©cessaire. Nous utilisons les compositions isotopiques du collagĂšne des ossements d'animaux (n = 643, 23 taxons, 39 sites) associĂ©s Ă  la pĂ©riode du Sylvicole supĂ©rieur (v. 900−1650 aprĂšs J.-C.) dans ce qui est maintenant le sud de l'Ontario, afin de tester des hypothĂšses quant Ă  l'ampleur avec laquelle les animaux ont utilisĂ© le maĂŻs, une plante isotopiquement distincte au cƓur des pratiques de subsistance des peuples de langue iroquoienne de la rĂ©gion. Les rĂ©sultats montrent que bien que certains taxons — en particulier ceux qui peuvent avoir Ă©tĂ© difficiles Ă  contrĂŽler — avaient un accĂšs substantiel au maĂŻs, la plupart n'en avaient pas, quels que soient les besoins en ressources animales des populations locales. Nos rĂ©sultats suggĂšrent que cette approche isotopique de la dĂ©tection de la chasse dans les milieux cultivĂ©s sera plus efficace lorsqu'elle sera appliquĂ©e Ă  des sociĂ©tĂ©s Ă  plus petite Ă©chelle.</div

    Investigating the sex-selectivity of a middle Ontario Iroquoian Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) fishery through ancient DNA analysis

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    Prior to European settlement, Indigenous peoples sustainably harvested Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) and lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush) from Lake Ontario for centuries. Previous studies have suggested Indigenous peoples were able to maintain the productivity of Atlantic salmon and lake trout fisheries in the Great Lakes region through the use of resource management strategies. Since males tend to be the surplus sex among salmonids, one way in which Indigenous peoples could have managed Atlantic salmon and lake trout stocks was through the preferential harvesting of males. Here, we sought to investigate whether Indigenous peoples traditionally used sex-selective fishing to manage Lake Ontario Atlantic salmon and lake trout stocks. To address this question, we modified a DNA-based sex identification method developed for ancient Pacific salmonid (Oncorhynchus spp.) remains to make it applicable to archaeological Atlantic salmonid (Salmo spp.) and char (Salvelinus spp.) remains. This method assigns sex identities to samples through two PCR assays that co-amplify a fragment of the Y-specific salmonid master sex-determining gene (sexually dimorphic on the Y-chromosome gene) and an internal positive control, consisting of a fragment of the mitochondrial D-loop or nuclear clock1b gene. We applied this method to 61 Atlantic salmon and lake trout remains from the Antrex site (AjGv-38), a Middle Ontario Iroquoian (ca. CE 1250 to 1300) village located in the Lake Ontario watershed. Using this method, we successfully assigned sex identities to 51 of these remains (83.61% success rate), highlighting our method’s sensitivity and efficacy. Statistical analyses indicate neither the aggregate sex ratio nor the sex ratios obtained for the individual species were male-biased. This suggests Antrex’s Middle Ontario Iroquoian inhabitants probably did not practice male-selective fishing for Atlantic salmon or lake trout
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