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Environmental factors in the evolution of dorset culture: a marginal proposal for Hudson bay. William Fitzhugh

Por: Fitzhugh, WilliamTipo de material: ArtículoArtículoIdioma: Inglés Series Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology ; no.31Detalles de publicación: Estados Unidos-US : Society for American Archaeology, 1976Descripción: páginas 139-149: ilustraciones en blanco y negroTema(s): PALEONTOLOGIA | ARQUEOLOGIA | PREHISTORIA En: Society for American Archaeology Memoirs of the Society for American ArchaeologyResumen: Despite Continued attention from archaeologist she origin of Dorset culture in the Eastern Arctic remains a persistent problem in northem prehistory. The transition from late Pre-Dorset to early Dorset culture is marked by a relatively rapid and consistent typological shift throughout a large geographic area at between about 1000 and 800 B.C. Although hampered by a distinct paucity of information, available chronological and distributional data do not supply a ready explanation for such consistent changes over such a wide-flung territory. However, the lack of a time slope and the presence of regional variants do not suggest that Dorset origins will be found in a single locale; rather, the transition appears to have occurred throughout a band of interacting populations within the core area of the eastern Central Arctic. Subsequent changes may be seen as a result of stylistic evolution, diffusion, and migration into more peripheral regions during the maximum extension of the Dorset sphere. Existencias: 1
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E/ MEM-SOC/ 31(1976) no.31 1 Disponible HEMREV035263

Despite Continued attention from archaeologist she origin of Dorset culture in the Eastern Arctic remains a persistent problem in northem prehistory. The transition from late Pre-Dorset to early Dorset culture is marked by a relatively rapid and consistent typological shift throughout a large geographic area at between about 1000 and 800 B.C. Although hampered by a distinct paucity of information, available chronological and distributional data do not supply a ready explanation for such consistent changes over such a wide-flung territory. However, the lack of a time slope and the presence of regional variants do not suggest that Dorset origins will be found in a single locale; rather, the transition appears to have occurred throughout a band of interacting populations within the core area of the eastern Central Arctic. Subsequent changes may be seen as a result of stylistic evolution, diffusion, and migration into more peripheral regions during the maximum extension of the Dorset sphere.

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