Integrating Zooarchaeology and Paleoethnobotany 2009
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4419-0935-0_3
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Methodological Issues in Paleoethnobotany: A consideration of Issues, Methods, and Cases

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Cited by 25 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…The density approach is related to a more conservative measure of abundance: ubiquity, commonly used in archaeobotany and occasionally in zooarchaeology (Popper 1988;Wright 2010;McKechnie and Moss 2016; see also Lyman 2008, 114-119). Defined as the proportion of samples, stratigraphic entities, or even sites containing a given taxon, ubiquity is particularly useful for finds categories whose distribution tends to be extremely patchy, in the sense that finds often occur in dense concentrations that would cause instability in results using fully quantitative measures.…”
Section: Monte Carlo Simulationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The density approach is related to a more conservative measure of abundance: ubiquity, commonly used in archaeobotany and occasionally in zooarchaeology (Popper 1988;Wright 2010;McKechnie and Moss 2016; see also Lyman 2008, 114-119). Defined as the proportion of samples, stratigraphic entities, or even sites containing a given taxon, ubiquity is particularly useful for finds categories whose distribution tends to be extremely patchy, in the sense that finds often occur in dense concentrations that would cause instability in results using fully quantitative measures.…”
Section: Monte Carlo Simulationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The field of archaeobotany (aka paleoethnobotany) has produced new information about the history of human plant use in prehistory (Fritz, 2005;Hastorf & Popper, 1988;Hather, 2010;Pearsall, 2000Pearsall, , 2007Piperno, 2006;Piperno & Pearsall, 1998;Wright, 2010). But there are still serious empirical problems hampering understanding of the early history of plant domestication that need to be sorted out before there can by any definitive patterns to compare and interpret (Fritz, 2005;Langlie, Mueller, Spengler, & Fritz, 2014).…”
Section: Epistemology Of Early Agriculture In the Tropical Lowlandsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…6, No. 1;2017 lower levels in sites, some plants, like maize, were been widely and intensively cultivated in late prehistory and historic times, so there's the potential for their remains to get from the surface into archaeological sites. That recent plants remains routinely get into archaeological deposits is show by their ubiquity in soil flotation light fractions.…”
Section: Datingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…O uso da técnica de flotação na recuperação de rem anescentes vegetais em sítios arqueológicos no Brasil tornou-se freqüente nos últimos anos, devido, em grande parte, aos avanços produzidos na m etodologia em pregada em contextos variados, em diferentes regiões do m undo (Pearsall 2000, Struever 1968, Wright 2010. N o Brasil, a partir dos anos 90, a produção de trabalhos científicos incentivou o desenvolvim ento das técnicas e m etodologias em pregadas pelos pesquisadores em diversas regiões, contribuindo para o conhecim ento acerca dos variados contextos apresentados (Scheel-Ybert et al 2005-6).…”
Section: Introductionunclassified