Additional Evidence for Early Cucurbit Use in the Northern Eastern Woodlands East of the Allegheny Front
- 1 July 1997
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Antiquity
- Vol. 62 (3) , 523-537
- https://doi.org/10.2307/282169
Abstract
Two accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) dates, 5404 ± 552 B.P. (AA-19129) and 2625 ± 45 B.P. (AA-19128), confirm the presence of mid-Holocene and early late Holocene cucurbit (Cucurbita pepo), respectively, at the Memorial Park site (36CN164) in north-central Pennsylvania. This is the second documented occurrence of mid-Holocene cucurbit and the first documented occurrence of domesticated early late Holocene cucurbit in the northern Eastern Woodlands east of the Allegheny Front. These occurrences help to establish the use of cucurbits in the Northeast on a timescale equivalent to that in the riverine interior, with the exception of the very earliest riverine interior dates. The Northeast has contributed little toward our understanding of prehistoric agricultural evolution in the Eastern Woodlands. The Memorial Park cucurbits and the mid-Holocene cucurbit recently reported at the Sharrow site in Maine indicate that greater efforts are needed to document pre-maize agricultural behavior in this area to increase our knowledge of the full range of pre-maize agricultural behavior in the Eastern Woodlands.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Revised checklist of New York State plantsPublished by Biodiversity Heritage Library ,1997
- Mid-Holocene Evidence ofCucurbitaSp. from Central MaineAmerican Antiquity, 1996
- Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) Dates Confirm Early Zea Mays in the Mississippi River ValleyAmerican Antiquity, 1994
- Domesticated Sunflower in Fifth Millennium B.P. Temporal Context: New Evidence from Middle TennesseeAmerican Antiquity, 1993
- Extended 14C Data Base and Revised CALIB 3.0 14C Age Calibration ProgramRadiocarbon, 1993
- Multiple pathways to farming in precontact eastern North AmericaJournal of World Prehistory, 1990
- Cultigens in Prehistoric Eastern North America: Changing Paradigms [and Comments and Replies]Current Anthropology, 1990
- Early/Middle Holocene Environments in the Middle Atlantic RegionPublished by Springer Nature ,1988
- Exceptional Genetic Divergence of Northern Flint CornAmerican Journal of Botany, 1986
- Accelerator radiocarbon dating of evidence for prehistoric horticulture in IllinoisNature, 1984