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Inter-site variability in the season of shellfish...
Journal article

Inter-site variability in the season of shellfish collection on the central coast of British Columbia

Abstract

High-resolution stable oxygen isotope analysis of the bivalve Saxidomus gigantea from shell midden sites was applied to identify seasonal patterns of resource procurement on the central coast of British Columbia, Canada. A total of 90 archaeological shells were examined from eight distinct sites spanning a 4500-year period. Combining micro-growth pattern analysis with high-resolution stable oxygen isotope sampling allows for a precise season of collection to be determined in estuarine bivalves recovered from archaeological sites. The results of the stable oxygen isotope analysis provide insights into seasonally structured harvest of S. gigantea (butter clam), which is associated with different types of sites. The results show a variety of patterns, including multi-seasonal collection, intensive seasonal harvesting and casual, supplemental use of butter clams at different locations.

Authors

Burchell M; Cannon A; Hallmann N; Schwarcz HP; Schöne BR

Journal

Journal of Archaeological Science, Vol. 40, No. 1, pp. 626–636

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

January 1, 2013

DOI

10.1016/j.jas.2012.07.002

ISSN

0305-4403

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