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The Future of the Past: Science in Archaeology Illinois Antiquity Vol The Future of the Past: Science in Archaeology Illinois Antiquity Vol. 50, No. 3 September 2015 REFERENCES AND SUGGESTED READINGS ARCHAEOLOGY AND ECOLOGY: BRIDGING THE SCIENCES THROUGH INTERDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH By Carol E. Colaninno LiDAR ILLUMINATED By Michael Farkas IDENTIFYING BLACK DRINK CEREMONIALISM AT CAHOKIA: CHEMICAL RESIDUE ANALYSIS By Thomas E. Emerson and Timothy R. Pauketat SOURCING NATIVE AMERICAN CERAMICS FROM WESTERN ILLINOIS By Julie Zimmermann Holt, Andrew J. Upton, and Steven A. Hanlin Conrad, Lawrence A. 1989 The Southeastern Ceremonial Complex on the Northern Middle Mississippian Frontier: Late Prehistoric Politico-religious Systems in the Central Illinois River Valley. In The Southeastern Ceremonial Complex: Artifacts and Analysis, edited by P. Galloway, pp. 93-113. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln. 1991 The Middle Mississippian Cultures of the Central Illinois Valley. In Cahokia and the Hinterlands: Middle Mississippian Cultures of the Midwest, edited by T. E. Emerson and R. B. Lewis, pp. 119-156. University of Illinois Press, Urbana. Dye, David H. 2004 Art, Ritual, and Chiefly Warfare in the Mississippian World. In Hero, Hawk, and Open Hand: American Indian Art of the Ancient Midwest and South, edited by R. F. Townsend, pp. 191-205. The Art Institute, Chicago. Fie, Shannon M. 2006 Visiting in the Interaction Sphere: Ceramic Exchange and Interaction in the Lower Illinois Valley. In Recreating Hopewell, edited by D. K. Charles and J. E. Buikstra, pp. 427-45. University Press of Florida, Gainesville. 2008 Middle Woodland Ceramic Exchange in the Lower Illinois Valley. Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 33:5-40. Fowles, Severin M., Leah Minc, Samuel Duwe and David V. Hill 2007 Clay, Conflict, and Village Aggregation: Compositional Analyses of Pre-Classic Pottery from Taos, New Mexico. American Antiquity 72(1):125-152. Hanlin, Steven 2015 Slaked, Baked, and Zapped: Collection and Analysis of Source Clays within Western Illinois Waterways using Infrared Spectroscopy. Unpublished senior project, Department of Anthropology, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville. Harn, Alan D. 1978 Mississippian Settlement Patterns in the Central Illinois River Valley. In Mississippian Settlement Patterns. Edited by B. Smith, pp. 233-268. Academic Press, Inc., New York. 1991 Prehistory of Dickson Mounds: The Dickson Excavation. Illinois State Museum Report of Investigations No. 35 1994 Variation in Mississippian Settlement Patterns: The Larson Settlement System in the Central Illinois River Valley. Illinois State Museum Reports of Investigations, No. 50. Springfield, IL. Mackin, Robert, Julie Zimmermann Holt, Edward Navarre, Victoria Weaver, and Michael Shaw 2014 Sourcing Prehistoric Ceramics from Western Illinois through FT-IR Spectroscopy and Developed Chemometric Methods. Illinois Archaeology 26: 181-207. Maschner, Herbert D. G. and Katherine L. Reedy-Maschner 1998 Raid, Retreat, Defend (Repeat). Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 17(1):19-51. Milner, George R., et. al. 1991a Warfare in Late Prehistoric West-Central Illinois. American Antiquity, 56(4):581- 603. 1991b Conflict, Mortality, and Community Health in an Illinois Oneota Population. In Between Bands and States: Sedentism, Subsistence, and Interaction in Small-scale Societies, edited by S. Gregg, pp. 245-264. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Occasional Papers No. 9, Southern Illinois University Carbondale. Parish, Ryan M. 2011 The Application of Visible/Near-Infrared Reflectance (VNIR) Spectroscopy to Chert: A Case Study from the Dover Quarry Sites, Tennessee. Geoarchaeology 26:420-439. Parish, Ryan Michael, George Hammond Swihart, and Ying Sing Li 2013 Evaluating Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy as a Non-Destructive Chert Sourcing Technique. Geoarchaeology 28:289-307. Santure, Sharron K., Alan D. Harn, and Duane Esarey 1990 Archaeological Investigations at the Morton Village and Norris Farms 36 Cemetery. Illinois State Museum Reports of Investigations, No. 45. Springfield, IL. Speakman, Robert J. et al. 2007 Selected Applications of Laser Ablation Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry to Archaeological Research. In Archaeological Chemistry, edited by M. Glascock et al., pp. 275- 296. American Chemical Society, Washington D.C. Steadman, Dawnie Wolfe 1998 The Population Shuffle in the Central Illinois Valley: A Diachronic Model of Mississippian Biocultural Interactions. World Archaeology, 30(2):306-326. 2001 Mississippian in Motion? A Population Genetic Analysis of Interregional Gene Flow in West-Central Illinois. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 114:61-73. 2008 Warfare Related Trauma at Orendorf, A Middle Mississippian Site in West-Central Illinois. American Journal of Physical Anthropology, 136:51-64. Wilson, Gregory D. 2012 Living with war: the impact of chronic violence in the Mississippian period central Illinois Valley. In The Oxford Handbook of North American Archaeology, edited by T.R. Pauketat, pp. 523-533. Oxford University Press. AN X-RAY ANALYSIS OF DOG MANDIBLES FROM THE BLACK EARTH SITE By Rosemary D. Bolin, Heather A. Lapham, and Kim D. Floerchinger Bannon, Kristin 2013 Clinical Canine Dental Radiography. Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice 43(1): 507-532. Evans, Howard E., and Alexander de Lahunta 2013 Miller’s Anatomy of the Dog. 4th ed. Pp. 33-290. Elsevier Health Sciences, Philadelphia, PA. Holmstrom, Steven 2013 Veterinary Dentistry A Team Approach. 2nd ed. Elsevier Health Sciences, Philapdelphia, PA. Jefferies, Richard W., and Brian M. Butler (eds.) 1982 The Carrier Mills Archaeological Project: Human Adaptation in the Saline Valley, Illinois. Research Paper 33, Center for Archaeological Investigations, Southern Illinois University Carbondale. Losey, Robert J., Jessup, E., Nomokonova, T., and Sablin, M. 2014 Craniomandibular Trauma and Tooth Loss in Northern Dogs and Wolves: Implications for the Archaeological Study of Dog Husbandry and Domestication. PLOS ONE 9(6): 1-16. Niemiec, Brook 2010 A Color Handbook Small Animal Dental, Oral, & Maxillofacial Disease. Manson Publishing, Alfred Place, London:. ANCIENT DNA SEQUENCING OF DOGS FROM THE AMERICAN BOTTOM By Kelsey Witt Ambrose, S. 1993. Isotopic Analysis of Paleodiets: Methodological and Interpretive Considerations. Food Nutr. Hist. Anthropol. Axelsson, E., A. Ratnakumar, M.L. Arendt, et al. 2013. The Genomic Signature of Dog Domestication Reveals Adaptation to a Starch-Rich Diet. Nature, January:1–6. Borgic, Q.L., and J.M. Galloy. 2004. Domesticated Dog Remains from the Janey B. Goode Site. Paper presented at the 2004 Joint meetings of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference and the Midwestern Archaeological Conference. Clutton-Brock, J. 1995. Origins of the Dog: Domestication and Early History. In Domest. Dog Its Evol. Behav. Interact. with People, edited by J. Serpell, 7–20. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge:. Druzhkova, A.S., O. Thalmann, V. a. Trifonov, et al. 2013. Ancient DNA Analysis Affirms the Canid from Altai as a Primitive Dog. Edited by M. Hofreiter. PLoS One 8:e57754. Freedman, A.H., I. Gronau, R.M. Schweizer, et al. 2014. Genome Sequencing Highlights the Dynamic Early History of Dogs. Edited by L. Andersson. PLoS Genet. 10:e1004016. Galloy, J.M. 2010. PART V : WOODLAND PERIOD The Janey B . Goode Site ( 11S1232 ): Highlights of Investigations at a Massive Late Prehistoric Site in the American Bottom. Illinois Archaeology 22:529–52. Larson, G., E.K. Karlsson, A. Perri, et al. 2012. Rethinking Dog Domestication by Integrating Genetics, Archeology, and Biogeography. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 109:8878–83. Li, Q., Z. Liu, Y. Li, et al. 2008. Origin and Phylogenetic Analysis of Tibetan Mastiff Based on the Mitochondrial DNA Sequence. J. Genet. Genomics 35:335–40. Noe-Nygaard, N. 1988. Δ 13 C-Values of Dog Bones Reveal the Nature of Changes in Man’s Food Resources at the Mesolithic-Neolithic Transition, Denmark. Chem. Geol. Isot. Geosci. Sect. 13:87–96. Pääbo, S., H. Poinar, D. Serre, et al. 2004. Genetic Analyses from Ancient DNA. Annu. Rev. Genet. 38:645–79. Pang, J.F., C. Kluetsch, X.J. Zou, et al. 2009. mtDNA Data Indicate a Single Origin for Dogs South of Yangtze River, Less than 16,300 Years Ago, from Numerous Wolves. Mol. Biol. Evol. 26:2849–64. Schwartz, M. 1997. A History of Dogs in the Early Americas. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. Thalmann, O., B. Shapiro, P. Cui, et al. 2013. Complete Mitochondrial Genomes of Ancient Canids Suggest a European Origin of Domestic Dogs. Science (80-. ). 342:871–74. Van der Merwe, N.J., and J.C. Vogel. 1978. 13C Content of Human Collagen as a Measure of Prehistoric Diet in Woodland North America. Nature. Vonholdt, B.M., J.P. Pollinger, K.E. Lohmueller, et al. 2010. Genome-Wide SNP and Haplotype Analyses Reveal a Rich History Underlying Dog Domestication. Nature 464. Nature Publishing Group:898–902. White, C.D., M.E.D. Pohl, H.P. Schwarcz, et al. 2001. Isotopic Evidence for Maya Patterns of Deer and Dog Use at Preclassic Colha. J. Archaeol. Sci. 28:89–107. Witt, K.E., K. Judd, A. Kitchen, et al. 2015. DNA Analysis of Ancient Dogs of the Americas: Identifying Possible Founding Haplotypes and Reconstructing Population Histories. J. Hum. Evol. 79. Elsevier Ltd:105–18. PRELIMINARY ANALYSES OF PREHISTORIC DOG FECES (COPROLITES) FROM THE JANEY B. GOODE SITE, ST. CLAIR COUNTY, ILLINOIS By Andrew C. Fortier Ambro, R.D. 1967 Dietary-technological-ecological Aspects of Lovelock Cave Coprolites. Reports of the University of California Archaeological Survey No. 70:37-48.
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