Abstract
R. Lee Lyman
Prehistoric Mink (Mustela vison) Trapping on the Northwest Coast
Journal of Field Archaeology 32 (2007) 91--95
In 1902 Franz Boas wondered "How far can archaeological methods
supplement ethnological information?" Ethnographic documents for the
Northwest Coast of North America fail to report the pattern of trap
placement when small fur-bearing mammals were sought. Zooarchaeological
data concerning mink (Mustela vison) remains from the Wapato Valley of
SW Washington and NW Oregon indicate that more males than females were
procured by late prehistoric foragers (A.D. 1400--1834). Modern
mammalogical data indicate this sex ratio is to be expected when traps
are placed in a grid rather than a linear pattern. Traps were
apparently distributed throughout the marshy lowlands of the Wapato
Valley in a grid pattern rather than in linear arrangements.
Archaeological data thus can supplement ethnological information.
Volume 32 Number 1 (Spring 2007)
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