Princess Point Complex

The Princess Point Complex (also called the Princess Point culture) refers to the appearance of the first horticultural economy in the early developmental stage of Ontario Iroquois that arose near Princess Point in southwestern Ontario.[1] The cultivation of maize,[2] especially, fostered characteristics associated with sedentism.

References

  1. Smith, David G.; Crawford, Gary W. (1997). "Recent Developments in the Archaeology of the Princess Point Complex in Southern Ontario". Canadian Journal of Archaeology. 21 (1): 9–32. ISSN 0705-2006. JSTOR 41103320.
  2. Haines, Helen R.; Smith, David G.; Galbraith, David; Theysmeyer, Tys (2011). "The Point of Popularity: A Summary of 10,000 years of Human Activity at the Princess Point Promontory, Cootes Paradise Marsh, Hamilton, Ontario". Canadian Journal of Archaeology. 35 (2): 232–257. ISSN 0705-2006. JSTOR 23267554.
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