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The Swordfish Hunters The History And Ecology Of An Ancient American Sea People Bourque

  • SKU: BELL-22130800
The Swordfish Hunters The History And Ecology Of An Ancient American Sea People Bourque
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The Swordfish Hunters The History And Ecology Of An Ancient American Sea People Bourque instant download after payment.

Publisher: Bunker Hill Publishing Inc
File Extension: PDF
File size: 4.08 MB
Author: Bourque, Bruce
ISBN: 9781593730383, 1593730381
Language: English
Year: 2012

Product desciption

The Swordfish Hunters The History And Ecology Of An Ancient American Sea People Bourque by Bourque, Bruce 9781593730383, 1593730381 instant download after payment.

In the closing years of the nineteenth century, strange objects began to come out of the ground in Hancock County, Maine. They were quickly recognized as prehistoric artifacts of stone, but they were very unlike the spear tips and other small artifacts collectors gathered from coastal sites as they eroded into the sea. Many were large and finely crafted, some made of beautiful stone from far-off places. Strangest of all, they came from pits filled with a brilliant red powder called red ocher. These were ancient graves clustered into large cemeteries.
Local naturalists brought these finds to the attention of a new breed of scientist—archaeologists who were busy developing their new science at the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnography at Harvard University. They began to visit and to excavate these sites and introduced them to the world in 1893 at Chicago’s World’s Columbian Exposition. Between then and 1920, other archaeologists became involved, searching for and discovering more than a dozen new cemeteries. Museum collections grew quickly, but so did confusion about what kind of culture could have produced these wonderful objects. Then interest in the so-called Red Paint cemeteries waned as American archaeologists began to broaden their horizons to other continents. The mystery of the Red Paint People was left hanging. A half century later, as Maine archaeology was undergoing a revival, a new generation of archaeologists, armed with the analytical tools of modern science, once again turned their attention to the Red Paint People and reached some surprising conclusions.
This book tells the story of the Red Paint People and the archaeologists who have tried to understand them for over a century. Interwoven with that story is one of scientific growth and evolution, as archaeologists have adopted new research models in collaboration with a broad range of natural scientists to flesh out the life story of a remarkable prehistoric culture: the swordfish hunters.

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