01497nas a2200193 4500008004100000245011700041210006900158300001200227490000700239520087600246653001701122653002201139653002401161653001201185653002001197100001701217700002101234856004801255 2009 eng d00aOn Pottery Change and Northern Iroquoian Origins: An Assessment from the Finger Lakes Region of Central New York0 aPottery Change and Northern Iroquoian Origins An Assessment from a367-3810 v283 a
Pots as tools is a concept that has been widely accepted and developed since Braun’s classic 1983 publication. However, in northeastern North America archaeologists continue to use pottery primarily as an aid to culture history and research problems based thereon. In central New York State it has been postulated that a change in pottery forming technique heralds the onset of Iroquoian pottery traditions at around AD 1000. Empirical data on pottery forming and two other pottery traits do not support this postulation. Rather the trends in these traits are consistent with social learning theory and changes in mobility and population aggregation. Following Engelbrecht (1999, 2003) we suggest that a more fruitful approach to understanding the evolution of northern Iroquoian groups is to be found in ethnogenesis theory as described by Moore (1994, 2001).
10aEthnogenesis10aLocal populations10aNorthern Iroquoians10aPottery10aSocial learning1 aHart, J., P.1 aBrumbach, H., J. uhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaa.2009.07.001