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ISOTOPIC ANALYSES REVEAL GEOGRAPHICAL AND SOCIOECONOMIC PATTERNS IN HISTORICAL DOMESTIC ANIMAL TRADE BETWEEN PREDOMINANTLY WHEAT- AND MAIZE-GROWING AGRICULTURAL REGIONS IN EASTERN NORTH AMERICA

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journal contribution
posted on 2020-07-31, 10:48 authored by Eric Guiry, Paul Szpak, Michael P Richards
Historical zooarchaeologists have made significant contributions to key questions about the social, economic, and nutritional dimensions of domestic animal use in North American colonial contexts; however, techniques commonly employed in faunal analyses do not offer a means of assessing many important aspects of how animals were husbanded and traded. We apply isotopic analyses to faunal remains from archaeological sites to assess the social and economic importance of meat trade and consumption of local and foreign animal products in northeastern North America. Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope analyses of 310 cattle and pigs from 18 rural and urban archaeological sites in Upper Canada (present-day southern Ontario, Canada; ca. A.D. 1790-1890) are compared with livestock from contemporary American sources to quantify the importance of meat from different origins at rural and higher- and lower-status urban contexts. Results show significant differences between urban and rural households in the consumption of local animals and meat products acquired through long-distance trade. A striking pattern in urban contexts provides new evidence for the social significance of meat origins in historical Upper Canada and highlights the potential for isotopic approaches to reveal otherwise-hidden evidence for social and economic roles of animals in North American archaeology.

History

Citation

American Antiquity, Volume 82, Issue 2, April 2017 , pp. 341-352

Author affiliation

School of Archaeology and Ancient History

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

American Antiquity

Volume

82

Issue

2

Pagination

341 - 352

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP) for Society for American Archaeology (SAA)

issn

0002-7316

eissn

2325-5064

Copyright date

2017

Language

English

Publisher version

https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/american-antiquity/article/isotopic-analyses-reveal-geographical-and-socioeconomic-patterns-in-historical-domestic-animal-trade-between-predominantly-wheat-and-maizegrowing-agricultural-regions-in-eastern-north-america/072543A1A42FE27D7C23ED22399EF587