2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.quaint.2021.03.020
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Coastal prehistory and submerged landscapes: Molluscan resources, shell-middens and underwater investigations

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Cited by 9 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…The oldest cases of relatively intensive exploitation of marine resources in general, and shellfish in particular, are documented in Middle Stone Age South African sites (Klein & Steele, 2013). Most of the remaining cases are dated from the early Holocene to the present (Bailey et al, 2013;Bailey & Hardy, 2021;Camara et al, 2017;Chenorkian, 1983;Hardy et al, 2016;Vernet & Tous, 2004). As far as West Africa is concerned, the Saloum Delta is the most investigated regional complex of shell middens.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The oldest cases of relatively intensive exploitation of marine resources in general, and shellfish in particular, are documented in Middle Stone Age South African sites (Klein & Steele, 2013). Most of the remaining cases are dated from the early Holocene to the present (Bailey et al, 2013;Bailey & Hardy, 2021;Camara et al, 2017;Chenorkian, 1983;Hardy et al, 2016;Vernet & Tous, 2004). As far as West Africa is concerned, the Saloum Delta is the most investigated regional complex of shell middens.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The intertidal zone is of particular importance because it often exposes archaeological materials that can provide important clues to patterns of land use when sea levels were lower than present and to the presence of archaeological sites at greater depth and further offshore. Offshore studies of submerged terrestrial landscapes have often been neglected as they fall midway between the interests of terrestrial archaeologists and underwater archaeologists (Bailey and Hardy 2021). This poses challenges to interpretation because the archaeology present in underwater landscapes may represent materials deposited on a terrestrial land surface when sea levels were lower than present, or artefacts displaced from more recent onshore deposits by erosion, or coastal maritime activities that took place during the most recent mid-to-late Holocene sea-level highstand, for example construction of fish traps (Bailey et al 2020a:15-16).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Analysis of the constituents of shell midden deposits is a common research activity, but extrapolating data sampled from a small number of sites to the overall study area remains a methodological and interpretive challenge. Global research on shell middens is refining methods for linking evidence of settlement and resource use across a variety of settings (e.g., Astrup et al 2019; Bailey and Hardy 2021; Litster et al 2020; Parkington et al 2020; Sanger et al 2021). On the Northwest Coast of North America, shell middens are ubiquitous and have formative roles in cultural historical frameworks and zooarchaeological analyses (Ames and Maschner 1999; Cannon 2013).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%