Archaeology--North America Population growth Archaeology--Mississippian
Proxy estimates of population size through time are compared for a small drainage near Columbus, Georgia and an adjacent portion of the Chattahoochee River valley. Resulting estimates of population growth differ most for the Mississippian (Late Prehistoric) period. A model linking the introduction of new cultigens to population growth, relocation, and changing modes of cultural transmission, is proposed to explain the rapid cultural change apparent from the archaeological record for the Southeast during this period.
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Title
Behavioral Correlates of Population Growth: A speculative example from the Middle Chattahoochee
Creators
Timothy A. Kohler (Author)
Publication Details
Southeastern archaeology., Vol.3(2), pp.153-163
Academic Unit
Anthropology, Department of
Identifiers
99900501840501842
Copyright
In copyright ; openAccess ; http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ; http://purl.org/eprint/accessRights/OpenAccess