
Contents
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Introduction Introduction
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Hunting to Procure Hides for Trade: Some Zooarchaeological Signatures Hunting to Procure Hides for Trade: Some Zooarchaeological Signatures
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The Northern Fur Trades: A Case Study from South-Central Pennsylvania The Northern Fur Trades: A Case Study from South-Central Pennsylvania
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Susquehannock Traders on the Chesapeake Bay and Beyond Susquehannock Traders on the Chesapeake Bay and Beyond
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Early Historic Susquehannock Sites Early Historic Susquehannock Sites
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Susquehannock Animal Economies Susquehannock Animal Economies
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Deer and Beaver Butchery Deer and Beaver Butchery
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Early Historic Deer-Hunting Strategies Early Historic Deer-Hunting Strategies
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Tracking the Pelt Trades in the Zooarchaeological Record Tracking the Pelt Trades in the Zooarchaeological Record
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References References
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37 Tracking the trade in animal pelts in early historic eastern North America
Get accessHeather A. Lapham (Research Archaeologist, Research Laboratories of Achaeology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) has been conducting zooarchaeological research in eastern North America for nearly twenty years. Her current research examines differential animal resource use and social aspects of Early Historic-period Native American and Spanish economies in the American Southeast, along with urban animal economies among the Classic-period Zapotec in Oaxaca, Mexico. She is the author of the book Hunting for Hides, which explores cultural change at a seventeenth century Native American settlement in southwestern Virginia, and more than a dozen other book chapters and journal articles.
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Published:05 April 2017
Cite
Abstract
This chapter highlights zooarchaeology’s contribution to our understanding of the trade in animal pelts (furs, skins, and hides) that flourished between Native Americans and Europeans in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in eastern North America. Hides from white-tailed deer (Odocoileus virginianus) dominated exchanges in the southern trades, whereas the northern trades focused mainly on acquiring pelts from American beaver (Castor canadensis) and other fur-bearing animals. Zooarchaeological signatures of hunting to procure deerskins for commercial trade are outlined on the basis of evidence from Native American animal economies in southwestern Virginia. A case study focused on early historic-period Susquehannock deer hunting and beaver harvesting in south-central Pennsylvania is then presented.
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