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Presentation 1_Dietary change revealed in kitchen refuse pits from the ancient floors of Housepit 54, K'etxelknáz (Bridge River Site), British Columbia.pdf

Title: Presentation 1_Dietary change revealed in kitchen refuse pits from the ancient floors of Housepit 54, K'etxelknáz (Bridge River Site), British Columbia.pdf
Authors: Anna Marie Prentiss; Ashley Hampton; Jeannie Larmon; Megan Denis; Thomas A. Foor; Haley O'Brien; Nathan Goodale; Matthew J. Walsh; Alysha Edwards; Joshua Jack; Ethan Ryan
Publication Year: 2026
Collection: Frontiers: Figshare
Subject Terms: Clinical and Sports Nutrition; dietary change; Pacific Northwest region; salmon; Bridge River archaeological site; sediment geochemical research; sediment micromorphology research; ancient refuse pits
Description: Introduction Dietary change in traditional fishing and foraging societies has been examined from standpoints of resource accessibility, population demands, and social needs. Typically, scholars focus on singular models to explain diet choice including those from optimal foraging theory, socio-ecology, and political and historical ecology. It is far less common that we are able to evaluate multiple factors affecting shifting diets and associated cooking procedures within a singular archaeological context. Methods In this paper, we draw data from the contents of deep pits filled with kitchen refuse from the 15 stratified anthropogenic floors of Housepit 54, Bridge River Site (K'etxelknáz), British Columbia. We distinguish refuse pits from sequentially re-used cache pits drawing on sediment micromorphology, sediment geochemistry, and general pit contents. Then, focusing on the refuse-filled pits, we develop direct insight into kitchen activities by examining variation in faunal and floral remains and geochemical signatures. Multivariate analysis allows us to recognize patterns of co-associations between faunal remains. Botanical remains and geochemical signatures provide additional support for conclusions regarding food procurement and processing. Temporal change in kitchen regimes is compared to trends in regional climate, local population, and house-level social change to assess alternative explanatory models. Results and discussion Results implicate the effects of variation in choice of prey and associated processing and transport procedures as primarily related to population and climate-related foraging pressures.
Document Type: conference object
Language: unknown
Relation: https://figshare.com/articles/presentation/Presentation_1_Dietary_change_revealed_in_kitchen_refuse_pits_from_the_ancient_floors_of_Housepit_54_K_etxelkn_z_Bridge_River_Site_British_Columbia_pdf/31189600
DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2025.1716684.s001
Availability: https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2025.1716684.s001; https://figshare.com/articles/presentation/Presentation_1_Dietary_change_revealed_in_kitchen_refuse_pits_from_the_ancient_floors_of_Housepit_54_K_etxelkn_z_Bridge_River_Site_British_Columbia_pdf/31189600
Rights: CC BY 4.0
Accession Number: edsbas.9041BA01
Database: BASE