Migration in Prehistory: Princess Point and the Northern Iroquoian Case

Snow has recently challenged the in situ theory of the origins of the Northern Iroquois, arguing that it is a controlling model that does not account for certain linguistic, social, ceramic, and settlement anomalies he identifies in the record of prehistoric Iroquoian development. He proposes a migr...

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Veröffentlicht in:American antiquity 1996-10, Vol.61 (4), p.782-790
Hauptverfasser: Crawford, Gary W., Smith, David G.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Snow has recently challenged the in situ theory of the origins of the Northern Iroquois, arguing that it is a controlling model that does not account for certain linguistic, social, ceramic, and settlement anomalies he identifies in the record of prehistoric Iroquoian development. He proposes a migration model that purports to respond to these anomalies. Data recently gathered from a project focusing on the Princess Point Complex of southern Ontario shed light on Snow’s hypothesis for a migration after A.D. 900. These new data do not support Snow’s migration scenario, at least as this model concerns Ontario and Princess Point.
ISSN:0002-7316
2325-5064
DOI:10.2307/282018