References for Physalis tables

References—Physalis tables

Adair, M.J. and Brown, M.E. 1978. The Two Deer Site (14BU55): A Plains Woodland–Plains Village Transition. In Prehistory and History of the El Dorado Lake Area (Phase II). Project Report Series No. 47. Museum of Anthropology, University of Kansas, Lawrence.

Benn, D.W. 1974. Seed Analysis and Its Implications for an Initial Middle Missouri Site in South Dakota. Plains Anthropologist 19:55-72.

Brandt, Carol B. 1991. The River’s Edge Archaeobotanical Analysis: Patterns in Plant Refuse. Zuni Pueblo, New Mexico. Zuni Archaeology Program. Ethnobiological Technical Series 91-2. Burrows, G.E. and R. J. Tyrl. 2001. Toxic Plants of North America. Iowa State University Press: Ames.

Castetter, E. E. 1935. Uncultivated Native Plants Used as Food—Ethnobotanical Studies in the American Southwest. New Mexico University Biological Series Bulletin, 4(1).

Castetter, E. F. and M. E. Opler 1936. The Ethnobiology of the Chiricahua and Mescalero Apache; Ethnobiological Studies in the American Southwest: III. A. The Use Of Plants For Foods, Beverages And Narcotics. New Mexico, University of New Mexico 4: 3-63.

Cozzo, D. N. 2004. Ethnobotanical Classification System and Medicinal Ethnobotany of the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Indians. PhD Dissertation. Anthropology Department, University of Georgia.

Crawford, G.W. and Smith, D.G. 2003. Paleoethnobotany in the Northeast. In People and Plants in Ancient Eastern North America, edited by P.E. Minnis. Smithsonian: Washington, DC.,172- 257.

Cushing, F. H. (1920) 1974. Zuni Breadstuff. New York, Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation.

Dello-Russo, R. D. 1999. Climatic Stress in the Middle Rio Grande Valley of New Mexico: An Evaluation of Changes in Foraging Behaviors During the Late Archaic/Basketmaker II Period. Unpublished Ph.D dissertation, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque.

Dering, J.P. 1993. Plant Remains. In Data Recovery at Justiceburg Reservoir (Lake Alan Henry), Garza, and Kent Counties, Texas: Phase III, Season 2, edited by D.K. Boyd. Prewitt and Associates, Austin, Texas, 431-434.

Doebley, J.F. 1981. Plant Remains Recovered by Floatation from Trash at Salmon Ruin, New Mexico. Kiva 46: 169-187.

Drass, R.R. 1993. Macrobotanical Remains from Two Early Plains Village Sites in Central Oklahoma. Plains Anthropologist 38:51-64.

Fletcher, A.C., and F. LaFlesche. 1911. The Omaha Tribe. Smithsonian Institution: Bureau of American Ethnology 27: 76-78.

Fuller, T., and E. McClintock. 1983. Poisonous Plants of California. University of California Press.

Gilmore, M. R. 1913. Some Native Nebraska Plants with Their Uses by the Dakota. Nebraska State Historical Society 17: 358-371.

Gilmore, M. R. 1977. Uses of Plants by the Indians of the Missouri River Region. University of Nebraska Press, Lincoln, NE.

Hamel, P. B. and M. U. Chiltoskey 1975. Cherokee Plants: Their Uses—a 400 Year History. Herald Publishing Company, Sylva, NC.

Hart, J.A., 1981. The Ethnobotany of the Northern Cheyenne Indians of Montana. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 4: 1-55.

Herrick, J. W. 1995. Iroquois Medical Botany. Syracuse University Press: Syracuse, New York.

Hough, W. 1898. Environmental Interrelations in Arizona. American Anthropologist 11(5): 133- 155.

Kindscher, K. and D. P. Hurlburt. 1998. Huron Smith’s Ethnobotany of the Hocąk (Winnebago). Economic Botany 52(4): 352-372.

Kuckelman, Kristin A. (editor). 2003. The Archaeology of Yellow Jacket Pueblo (Site 5MT5): Excavations at a Large Community Center in Southwestern Colorado. Crow Canyon Archaeological Center, Cortez, Colorado.

Laferriere, J.E., C.W. Weber, and E.A. Kohlhepp. 1991. Use and Nutritional Composition of Some Traditional Mountain Pima Plant Foods. Journal of Ethnobiology 11: 93-114.

Lee, C and P. Houghton. 2005. Cytotoxicity of Plants from Malaysia and Thailand used Traditionally to Treat Cancer. Journal of Ethnopharmacology 100: 237-43.

McBride, Pamela J. 2008. Diet and Subsistence on the Pajarito Plateau: Evidence from Flotation and Vegetal Sample Analysis. In The Land Conveyance and Transfer Data Recovery Project: 7000 Years of Land Use on the Pajarito Plateau, Volume 3: Artifact and Sample. Analyses, edited by Bradley J. Vierra and Kari M. Schmidt, pp. 399-521. Los Alamos National Laboratory, Cultural Resources Report No. 273. Los Alamos, New Mexico.

Mead, B. 1981. Seed Analysis of the Meehan-Schell Site (13BN110), a great Oasis Site in Central Iowa. Journal of the Iowa Archeological Society 28: 15-90.

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Moerman, D. 2011. Native American Ethnobotany Database. Accessed November 11, 2011.

Nickel, R. K. 1974. Plant Resource Utilization at a Late Prehistoric Site in North-central South Dakota. Master’s thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Nebraska.

Rea, A.M., 1997. At the Desert's Green Edge: An Ethnobotany of the Gila River Pima. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.

Rogers, D. J. 1980. Lakota Names and Traditional Uses of Native Plants by Sicangu (Brule) People in the Rosebud Area, South Dakota. The Rosebud Educational Society, Inc., St. Francis, South Dakota.

Smith, H. H. 1928. Ethnobotany of the Meskwaki Indians. Bulletin of the Public Museum of the City of Milwaukee 4(2): 175-326.

Toll, Mollie S., and Pamela J. McBride. 2011. Flotation Remains from Prehistoric Proveniences. Ch. 13 in Archaeological Excavations at El Pueblo de Santa Fe (LA 1051). Volume 1: Village of the Shell Bead Water People: A Prehistoric Trade and Ceremonial Community in Downtown Santa Fe, New Mexico, by Stephen C. Lentz, Archaeology Notes 410. Museum of New Mexico, Office of Archaeological Studies, Santa Fe.

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Zier, C.J. and Kalasz, S.M. 1991. Recon John Shelter and the Archaic-Woodland Transition in Southeastern Colorado. Plains Anthropologist 36:111-138.