This dissertation evaluates the ecology of low population density forager territoriality through the lens of ideal free and despotic distribution models. It does so by asking how the Tubatulabal were able to maintain a territory in the far southern Sierra Nevada while dramatic social, technological, and economic shifts occurred throughout the region over the last 1500 to 2000 years. Their low population density and presumed long-term emplacement in the far southern Sierra Nevada provides a unique opportunity to assess how differential habitat use may change through time and contribute to territorial behavior. I hypothesize that an early ideal free pattern during the period of territorial formation should be replaced by a later ideal despoti...
Archaeologists describe the Uinta Fremont (A.D. 0 – 1300) as a mixed foraging-farming society that u...
Alpine villages are extremely rare in the Great Basin. To date, villages located at elevations above...
This dissertation examines human settlement-size variation through the lens of hunter-gatherer archa...
This thesis compares the pre-contact settlement patterns of the Miwok and the Mono in the central an...
Changes in social organization accelerated on California's northern Channel Islands beginning around...
Thesis (M.A., Anthropology) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2010.The study investigated ...
Global patterns of ethnolinguistic diversity vary tremendously. Some regions show very little variat...
Thesis (M.A.), Anthropology, Washington State UniversityThis thesis identifies several environmental...
Thesis (M.A., Anthropology) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2013.Recent models of resour...
Despite considerable differences in plant communities across western California, the region’s hunter...
This study addresses how hunter-gatherers provision themselves when they have a large, dense populat...
UA Open Access Publishing Fund awarded when author was at University of Arizona.Settlement size pred...
Using targeted survey, excavation, and radiocarbon dating, we assess the extent to which human settl...
Demographic and land use dynamics have important implications for the natural environment within bot...
This paper reports a study of geologic/hydrologic environmental association in the central Sierra Ne...
Archaeologists describe the Uinta Fremont (A.D. 0 – 1300) as a mixed foraging-farming society that u...
Alpine villages are extremely rare in the Great Basin. To date, villages located at elevations above...
This dissertation examines human settlement-size variation through the lens of hunter-gatherer archa...
This thesis compares the pre-contact settlement patterns of the Miwok and the Mono in the central an...
Changes in social organization accelerated on California's northern Channel Islands beginning around...
Thesis (M.A., Anthropology) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2010.The study investigated ...
Global patterns of ethnolinguistic diversity vary tremendously. Some regions show very little variat...
Thesis (M.A.), Anthropology, Washington State UniversityThis thesis identifies several environmental...
Thesis (M.A., Anthropology) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2013.Recent models of resour...
Despite considerable differences in plant communities across western California, the region’s hunter...
This study addresses how hunter-gatherers provision themselves when they have a large, dense populat...
UA Open Access Publishing Fund awarded when author was at University of Arizona.Settlement size pred...
Using targeted survey, excavation, and radiocarbon dating, we assess the extent to which human settl...
Demographic and land use dynamics have important implications for the natural environment within bot...
This paper reports a study of geologic/hydrologic environmental association in the central Sierra Ne...
Archaeologists describe the Uinta Fremont (A.D. 0 – 1300) as a mixed foraging-farming society that u...
Alpine villages are extremely rare in the Great Basin. To date, villages located at elevations above...
This dissertation examines human settlement-size variation through the lens of hunter-gatherer archa...