Diachronic palaeodietary analysis of prairie fringe peoples of southeastern Manitoba

Subsistence pursuits are intricately connected to social, political, economic and biological phenomena. The study of subsistence strategies, therefore, is fundamental to understanding a population. The objectives of this study are two-fold. First, is to develop a model of the subsistence that can ac...

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Main Author: Ens, Denise A.
Language:en_US
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1154
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.1993-11542014-03-29T03:41:20Z Diachronic palaeodietary analysis of prairie fringe peoples of southeastern Manitoba Ens, Denise A. Subsistence pursuits are intricately connected to social, political, economic and biological phenomena. The study of subsistence strategies, therefore, is fundamental to understanding a population. The objectives of this study are two-fold. First, is to develop a model of the subsistence that can account for the variability potential used in the prairie fringe of southeasten Manitoba. Second, is to contribute to stable isotope research in Canada. The principal method of analysis of the human remains from five burial sites is stable carbon and nitrogen analysis of bone collagen. However, this is a multidisciplinary study that incorporates dental palaeopathological, historical, archaeological, and environmental evidence into the analysis. Stable isotope analysis has seldom been used to study palaeodiets in the northern temperate zone in Canada. This study demonstrates the potential of this technique for biological and environmental studies within this region. The results suggest a tripartite subsistence modelfor the prairie fringe of southeastern Manitoba. This model suggests that prior to European contact subsistence strategies in this region were quite restricted. One strategy focussed predominantly on aquatic animals, and another strategy focussed on terrestrial animals. The latter strategy is further divided into two groups that either concentrated on boreal forest/parkland mammals, or groups that relied heavily on plains mammals. Furthermore, the highly diverse diet of the seasonal round recorded in historic documents may be a post-European contact phenomenon. 2007-05-15T19:04:02Z 2007-05-15T19:04:02Z 1998-05-01T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1154 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
description Subsistence pursuits are intricately connected to social, political, economic and biological phenomena. The study of subsistence strategies, therefore, is fundamental to understanding a population. The objectives of this study are two-fold. First, is to develop a model of the subsistence that can account for the variability potential used in the prairie fringe of southeasten Manitoba. Second, is to contribute to stable isotope research in Canada. The principal method of analysis of the human remains from five burial sites is stable carbon and nitrogen analysis of bone collagen. However, this is a multidisciplinary study that incorporates dental palaeopathological, historical, archaeological, and environmental evidence into the analysis. Stable isotope analysis has seldom been used to study palaeodiets in the northern temperate zone in Canada. This study demonstrates the potential of this technique for biological and environmental studies within this region. The results suggest a tripartite subsistence modelfor the prairie fringe of southeastern Manitoba. This model suggests that prior to European contact subsistence strategies in this region were quite restricted. One strategy focussed predominantly on aquatic animals, and another strategy focussed on terrestrial animals. The latter strategy is further divided into two groups that either concentrated on boreal forest/parkland mammals, or groups that relied heavily on plains mammals. Furthermore, the highly diverse diet of the seasonal round recorded in historic documents may be a post-European contact phenomenon.
author Ens, Denise A.
spellingShingle Ens, Denise A.
Diachronic palaeodietary analysis of prairie fringe peoples of southeastern Manitoba
author_facet Ens, Denise A.
author_sort Ens, Denise A.
title Diachronic palaeodietary analysis of prairie fringe peoples of southeastern Manitoba
title_short Diachronic palaeodietary analysis of prairie fringe peoples of southeastern Manitoba
title_full Diachronic palaeodietary analysis of prairie fringe peoples of southeastern Manitoba
title_fullStr Diachronic palaeodietary analysis of prairie fringe peoples of southeastern Manitoba
title_full_unstemmed Diachronic palaeodietary analysis of prairie fringe peoples of southeastern Manitoba
title_sort diachronic palaeodietary analysis of prairie fringe peoples of southeastern manitoba
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1154
work_keys_str_mv AT ensdenisea diachronicpalaeodietaryanalysisofprairiefringepeoplesofsoutheasternmanitoba
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