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Marine trophic levels targeted between AD 300 and 1500 on the Georgia coast,USA
Authors:Irvy R. Quitmyer  Elizabeth J. Reitz
Affiliation:1. Florida Museum of Natural History, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611-7800, USA;2. Georgia Museum of Natural History, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602-1882, USA
Abstract:The marine trophic levels targeted during Swift Creek (AD 300–700) and Savannah (AD 1200–1500) occupations at the Cathead Creek site (9Mc360) and at two sites from the Kings Bay Locality (9CAM171a, 9CAM177), coastal Georgia, USA, differ in a consistent temporal and spatial pattern. Vertebrate and invertebrate remains from these three coastal sites contain similar suites of estuarine animals. However, Swift Creek peoples at these distinct hydrological settings obtained more biomass from fishes and less from molluscs compared to the subsequent Savannah occupants. The two Swift Creek faunal collections are less rich, more diverse, and more equitable than the two subsequent Savannah collections regardless of location. Furthermore, the mean trophic level is higher in the Swift Creek collections compared to the Savannah ones at both locations. These observations apply to both biomass and Minimum Number of Individuals. These differences likely are defining characteristics distinguishing the Swift Creek and the Savannah economies. More research is needed to determine the extent to which these temporal and spatial patterns are attributable to environmental and cultural variables.
Keywords:Zooarchaeology   Marine resource use   Southeastern United States Atlantic coast   Trophic level   Mid-Holocene environmental change
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