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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Title
An ethnohistorical perspective on hunter-gatherer complexity in South Florida
Resource Type
Conference paper
Conference
73rd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology (Vancouver, British Columbia, 2008)
Format
pdf
Number of pages
14
Copyright
Permission granted to the University of West Florida Libraries by the author to digitize and/or display this information for non-profit research and educational purposes. Any reuse of this item in excess of fair use or other copyright exemptions requires the permission of the copyright holder.
Identifiers
99380090328406600
Academic Unit
Anthropology
Language
English
An ethnohistorical perspective on hunter-gatherer complexity in South Florida