Book Review of <i> Stone by Stone: Exploring Ancient Sites on the Canadian Plains</i> by Liz Bryan


Autoria(s): Meyer, David
Data(s)

01/10/2006

Resumo

Liz Bryan begins her book with a description of the Canadian Plains:" . .. a voluptuous landscape of hills and valleys and plains, of lakes and tiny twinkling potholes, of flower-filled coulees and vast sand dunes." Her emphasis throughout on the landscape of southern Saskatchewan and Alberta is necessary since the ancient monuments she describes only truly resonate within this setting. Indeed, almost every page of this attractive book is adorned with at least two color images-of scenery, stone features, artifacts, and aboriginal events. She then proceeds to an eclectic overview of the archaeological record of the Plains of Saskatchewan and Alberta, including the earliest human evidence, such as the Clovis points from the Wally's Beach site, Alberta, where the trackways of mammoths, camels, and muskoxen were miraculously and briefly exposed in the late 1990s. There is one perplexing error, however-the attribution of the extinction of the ice age bestiary, about 12,000 years ago, to the meteorite that felled the dinosaurs!

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/greatplainsresearch/834

http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1835&context=greatplainsresearch

Publicador

DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln

Fonte

Great Plains Research: A Journal of Natural and Social Sciences

Palavras-Chave #Other International and Area Studies
Tipo

text