Measuring Foraging Efficiency with Archaeological Faunas: The Relationship Between Relative Abundance Indices and Foraging Returns
- 1 December 2001
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in Journal of Archaeological Science
- Vol. 28 (12) , 1309-1321
- https://doi.org/10.1006/jasc.2001.0679
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Resource depression on the Northwest Coast of North AmericaPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2000
- A Mathematical Model of the Effects of Screen Size on Zooarchaeological Relative Abundance MeasuresJournal of Archaeological Science, 1999
- On Evolutionary Ecology, Selectionist Archaeology, and Behavioral ArchaeologyAmerican Antiquity, 1999
- Cooperation and conflict: The behavioral ecology of the sexual division of laborEvolutionary Anthropology, 1999
- Widening diet breadth, declining foraging efficiency, and prehistoric harvest pressure: ichthyofaunal evidence from the Emeryville Shellmound, CaliforniaPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1997
- Declines in Mammalian Foraging Efficiency during the Late Holocene, San Francisco Bay, CaliforniaJournal of Anthropological Archaeology, 1994
- Late Holocene Resource Intensification in the Sacramento Valley, California: The Vertebrate EvidenceJournal of Archaeological Science, 1994
- Diet Breadth, Adaptive Change, and the White Mountains FaunasJournal of Archaeological Science, 1993
- Alpine faunas from the White Mountains, California: Adaptive change in the late prehistoric great basin?Journal of Archaeological Science, 1991
- Factors Influencing the Archaic Pattern of Animal ExploitationKIVA, 1979