Although trends in anthropological thinking have gradually shifted
away from considering prehistoric groups as specialists in
subsistence provisioning, many scholars studying the North American
Plains still consider man to be the Bison hunter'. In this study,
Marcel Kornfield presents archaeological evidence and a theoretical
model for the inhabitants of the Black Hills being generalists' or
broad spectrum hunters. Considering the environment, ecology,
sites, landscape and technological organisation required for
subsistence provisioning, Kornfield presents a new approach to
interpreting foraging patterns in this part of the North American
Plains.
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