Method and Theory in Coastal New York Archaeology: Paradigms of Settlement Pattern
- 1 July 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in North American Archaeologist
- Vol. 3 (1) , 5-36
- https://doi.org/10.2190/m4vw-8ana-rw5w-w7kl
Abstract
Settlement pattern research in Coastal New York follows the philosophical structure of advances in method and theory in science. Two alternative paradigms for settlement pattern complexity are currently under debate with the traditional based on maize as the principal factor to promote or “allow” increased sedentism, and the new on the European fur-wampum trade. The history of the two paradigms is presented and five important issues are discussed and evaluated as supporting evidence: archaeological maize, pollen, soil, fertilizer, and settlement pattern models. The evidence appears to offer stronger support for the new. The major goal of this paper is to outline past and present archaeological research as a basis for future directions; it is also to serve as a rejoinder to Silver's (1980) comments on an earlier article of mine (1979) in this journal.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Report On the Workshop On the Calibration of the Radiocarbon Dating Time ScaleRadiocarbon, 1980
- Maize Cultivation in Coastal New York: The Archaeological, Agronomical, and Documentary EvidenceNorth American Archaeologist, 1979
- Pollen Indicators of Land-Use Change in Southern ConnecticutQuaternary Research, 1978
- Fish Fertilizer: A Native North American Practice?Science, 1975
- Pollen Preservation and Archaeology in Eastern North AmericaAmerican Antiquity, 1975
- Man's Influence on the Development of the Estuarine Marsh, Flax Pond, Long Island, New YorkBulletin of the Torrey Botanical Club, 1975
- Pleistocene geology of eastern Long Island, New YorkAmerican Journal of Science, 1964
- Agricultural Potential and the Development of CulturesSouthwestern Journal of Anthropology, 1959
- Environmental Limitation on the Development of Culture1American Anthropologist, 1954
- Narratives of New Netherland, 1609-1664Published by Smithsonian Institution ,1909