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An ethnohistorical perspective on hunter-gatherer complexity in South Florida
Conference paper   Open access

An ethnohistorical perspective on hunter-gatherer complexity in South Florida

John E. Worth
73rd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology (Vancouver, British Columbia, 2008)
2008

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Abstract

Although South Florida was neither fully explored or assimilated during the Spanish colonial era (1513-1760), ethnohistorical records from this era provide tantalizing clues as to the nature of hunter-gatherer complexity in this broad region. Detailed examination of Spanish sources reveal both similarities and differences between South Florida groups and the more well-documented agricultural chiefdoms to the north. Though variations in both space and time are apparent, South Florida as a whole displays an internal coherence that distinguishes it as a regional subset of the broader pattern of sociopolitical complexity across the Southeastern United States. geography of this unique nonagricultural region sandwiched between the agricultural peoples of northern Florida and Cuba.
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