Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
A. Kelley, J. Kelley (2012)
Surficial geology of the Old Town quadrangle, Maine
A. Dieffenbacher-Krall, Andrea Nurse (2005)
Late-Glacial and Holocene Record of Lake Levels of Mathews Pond and Whitehead Lake, Northern Maine, USAJournal of Paleolimnology, 34
J Petersen, N Hamilton, D Putnam, A Spiess, R Stuckenrath, C Thayer, J Wolford (1986)
The Piscataquis Archaeological Project: a late Pleistocene occupational sequence in northern New EnglandArchaeology of Eastern North America, 14
B. Bourque, S. Cox, R. Whitehead (2001)
Twelve Thousand Years: American Indians in Maine
(1985)
Bedrock geologic map of Maine. Maine Geological Survey
J. Petersen, N. Hamilton, D. Putnam, A. Spiess, R. Stuckenrath, C. Thayer, J. Wolford (1986)
The Piscataquis Archaeological Project: A Late Pleistocene and Holocene Occupational Sequence in Northern New England
(1996)
A regional analysis of Moorehead burial tradition : 8500 - 3700 BP
Paul Mayewskia, Eelco Rohlingb, J. Stagerc, Wibj, rn Karlénd, Kirk Maascha, L. Meekere, Eric Meyersona, Francoise Gassef, Shirley Kreveldg, Karin Holmgrend, Julia Lee-Thorph, Gunhild Rosqvistd, Frank Racki, Michael Staubwasserj, Ralph Schneiderk, Eric Steigl (2004)
Holocene climate variabilityQuaternary Research, 62
D. Sanger, R. Bradley, R. Mckay, B. Bourque (1979)
Discovering Maine's archaeological heritage 1979
G. Rapp, Christopher Hill (1998)
Geoarchaeology: The Earth-Science Approach to Archaeological Interpretation
W. Barnhardt, W. Gehrels, J. Kelley (1995)
Late Quaternary relative sea-level change in the western Gulf of Maine: Evidence for a migrating glacial forebulgeGeology, 23
(1987)
Archaeological phase II testing at Eddington Bend site
D. Sanger (1973)
Cow point : an archaic cemetery in New Brunswick
L. King (1996)
Late Wisconsinan ice retreat from the Scotian ShelfGeological Society of America Bulletin, 108
A. Kelley, J. Kelley, D. Belknap, A. Gontz (2011)
Coastal and Terrestrial Impact of the Isostatically Forced Late Quaternary Drainage Divide Shift, Penobscot and Kennebec Rivers, Maine, USA, 27
W Moorehead (1922)
Report on the archaeology of Maine
(2005)
CALIB Radiocarbon Calibration
A. Ganopolski, C. Kubatzki, M. Claussen, V. Brovkin, V. Petoukhov (1998)
The influence of vegetation-atmosphere-ocean interaction on climate during the mid-holoceneScience, 280 5371
(1996)
A regional analysis of Moorehead burial tradition
G. Nicholas (1998)
Wetlands and Hunter‐Gatherers: A Global PerspectiveCurrent Anthropology, 39
(2001)
An 8000 - yr Holocene record of lake levels at Mansell Rond , central Maine , U . S . A
G. Nicholas (1988)
Holocene Human Ecology in Northeastern North America
S Fiedel (2001)
What happened in the Early Woodland?Archaeology of Eastern North America, 29
(1981)
Late Wisconsin ice sheets in North America. In: DentonGH, Hughes TJ (eds) The last great ice sheets
(1998)
Paleoindian occupation in the New England-Maritimes region: beyond cultural ecology
(1988)
Phase I archaeological research in the Stillwater and Milford Reservoirs
B. Bourque (1995)
Diversity and Complexity in Prehistoric Maritime Societies: A Gulf Of Maine Perspective
R. Hooke, E. Metcalfe, R. Wiesner (2009)
Surficial geology of the Greenbush quadrangle, Maine
(1985)
Surficial geologic map of Maine. Maine Geological Survey, Augusta ME
(1991)
Archaeological testing at the sharrow site: a deeply stratified Early to Late Holocene cultural sequence in Central Maine. Occasional Publications in Archaeology
W. Thompson, H. Borns (1985)
Surficial geologic map of Maine
W. Ritchie (1966)
The Archaeology of New York State
William Belcher, D. Sanger, B. Bourque (1994)
The Bradley Cemetery: a moorehead burial tradition site in MaineCanadian journal of archaeology, 18
(1992)
Early Holocene occupation in the central gulf of Maine region
(1992)
Early and Middle Archaic period occupation in the Gulf of Maine region: mortuary and technological patterning
R. Fairbanks (1989)
A 17,000-year glacio-eustatic sea level record: influence of glacial melting rates on the Younger Dryas event and deep-ocean circulationNature, 342
(1988)
Ecological leveling: the archaeology and environmental dynamics of early postglacial land use. In: Nicholas GP (ed) Holocene human ecology in northeastern North America
G. Balco, D. Belknap, J. Kelley (1998)
Glacioisostasy and Lake-Level Change at Moosehead Lake, MaineQuaternary Research, 49
H. Almquist, A. Dieffenbacher-Krall, R. Flanagan-Brown, D. Sanger (2001)
The Holocene record of lake levels of Mansell Pond, central Maine, USAThe Holocene, 11
A Kelley, D Sanger (2003)
Geoarchaeology in landscapes of the glaciated northeast
A. Kelley (2006)
Archaeological Geology and Postglacial Development of the Central Penobscot River Valley, Maine, USA
David Anderson (2011)
Climate Change and Cultural Dynamics: A Global Perspective on Mid-Holocene Transitions
K. Butzer (1982)
Archaeology as human ecology : method and theory for a contextual approach, 19
(2003)
Post-glacial development of the Penobscot River Valley: implications for geoarchaeology
(2005)
Pre-European dawnland: archaeology of the Maritime peninsula
(1992)
Early Holocene occupation at the Blackman Stream site , central Maine
(2001)
An 8000yr Holocene record of lake levels at Mansell Rond, central Maine, U.S.A. The Holocene
(2005)
CALIB 5 . 0 . Calib Radiocarbon Calibration
(1982)
Archaeological investigations at the Young Site, Alton, Maine. Occasional Publications in Maine Archaeology 2. Augusta: Maine Archaeological Society and Historic Preservation Commission
C. Hildreth (2011)
Surficial geology of the Veazie quadrangle, Maine
(1981)
Late Wisconsin ice sheets in North America
(1999)
Beyond presence and absence: establishing diversity in Connecticut’s early Holocene archaeological record
P. Osberg, A. Hussey, Gary Boone (1985)
Bedrock geologic map of Maine
(2002)
The Bob site: an Archaic to Ceramic period site in Central Maine. Maine Archaeological Society Occasional Publications in Archaeology
B. Robinson (2001)
Burial ritual, groups, and boundaries on the Gulf of Maine : 8600-3800 B.P.
D. Sanger, R. Davis, R. Mackay, H. Borns (1977)
THE HIRUNDO ARCHAEOLOGICAL PROJECT ‐ AN INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACH TO CENTRAL MAINE PREHISTORY *Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 288
J. Parkington, K. Butzer (1982)
Archaeology as human ecology
D. Sanger, H. Almquist, A. Dieffenbacher-Krall (2007)
Mid-Holocene cultural adaptations to central Maine
(1975)
Culture change as an adaptive process in the MaineMaritimes region
(1979)
Discovering Maine’s archaeological heritage. Maine Historic Preservation
(2001)
What happened in the Early Woodland? Archaeology of Eastern North America
(1999)
Paleogeographic changes in wetland and upland environments in the Milford Drainage basin of central Maine, in relation to Holocene human settlement in history
H. Almquist-Jacobson, D. Sanger (1995)
Holocene climate and vegetation in the Milford drainage basin, Maine, U.S.A., and their implications for human historyVegetation History and Archaeobotany, 4
D. Sanger, A. Kelley, Henry Berry (2001)
Geoarchaeology at Gilman Falls: An Archaic quarry and manufacturing site in central Maine, U.S.A.Geoarchaeology, 16
(1991)
An aboriginal ceramic sequence for Maine and the maritime provinces
(2006)
Glacial and archaeological features of the Penobscot Lowland, Central Maine. Guidebook prepared for the 69th annual field conference, Northeastern Friends of the Pleistocene
(1988)
Ecological leveling : the archaeology and environmental dynamics of early postglacial land use
A holistic landscape approach to cultural resource analysis of a set of archaeological sites in the central Penobscot Valley led to inferences regarding the Holocene physical and biological environmental context. Targeted environmental studies include (1) examination of forest and wetland changes through time and (2) lake-level studies as a key to paleohydrology. These studies were combined with broad-scale geomorphic investigations and detailed stratigraphic analyses, and studies of archaeological sites and their artifact assemblages. Together, these studies provide a picture of dramatic changes to the physical and vegetational landscape. These included reestablishment of a major river following deglaciation, evolution of extensive lakes to uplands and peatlands, and a shifting mosaic of open and closed forest composed of a variety of hardwood and softwood species. Inferences based on buried soils exposed in archaeological excavations supported climatic interpretations based on vegetation and paleohydrology. As a result, this work allowed evaluation of (1) site formation and preservation processes and (2) occupational patterns. Site formation and preservation of Early Holocene sites can be linked to sedimentation by hydraulic damming upstream of rapids at the mouths of tributary streams. Shifting human land use reflected by changes in occupation patterns appears to correspond to changes in forest composition as well as wetland and stream evolution through time.
Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences – Springer Journals
Published: Apr 13, 2014
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.