2012
DOI: 10.1179/pan.2012.017
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Refining Plains Woodland Chronology

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Among the most interesting is the contrast between dated macroremains and dates obtained on residues containing maize microremains. AMS dates on maize from sites in western Illinois and eastern Kansas indicate that, with the exception of the Edgar Hoener maize discussed above, those materials, once thought to date to the Middle and Late Woodland periods, are actually much younger than the contexts of recovery would suggest (Adair 2012; Adair and Drass 2011; Conard et al 1984; Simon 2014). In Illinois, these results are strongly supported by recent skeletal isotope analyses (Emerson et al 2015).…”
Section: The Maize Paradoxmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Among the most interesting is the contrast between dated macroremains and dates obtained on residues containing maize microremains. AMS dates on maize from sites in western Illinois and eastern Kansas indicate that, with the exception of the Edgar Hoener maize discussed above, those materials, once thought to date to the Middle and Late Woodland periods, are actually much younger than the contexts of recovery would suggest (Adair 2012; Adair and Drass 2011; Conard et al 1984; Simon 2014). In Illinois, these results are strongly supported by recent skeletal isotope analyses (Emerson et al 2015).…”
Section: The Maize Paradoxmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…North of Mexico, maize entered the economies of indigenous foragers in the US Southwest by approximately 2500-2000 BC and was part of the package of cultural traits that moved with Basketmaker II phase farming groups early in the first millennium AD (Hanselka and Vierra 2017). The pathway(s) that maize took into the Plains is currently unclear, but macrobotanical evidence in the eastern Plains points to its appearance between cal AD 688 and 977 (Adair 2012). Recent microbotanical evidence suggests that maize was part of Indigenous systems in the eastern Plains as early as cal 361-197 BC (Adair et al 2022).…”
Section: Maize Historiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To account for the maize histories in the Northeast, sufficient time would be needed for maize to adapt to temperate latitudes as it was adopted by different groups. However, the oldest directly dated maize macroremain from the central Plains is AD cal 874 (δ 13 C of −9.48 and 2σ range of cal AD 777–977) and AD cal 810 (δ 13 C of −9.4 and 2σ range of cal AD 688–935) from the Avoca site (Adair 2003, 2012), centuries later than the microbotanical evidence for early maize in the Northeast.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%