Inlet: Contributions to Archaeology https://journal.archpress.lib.sfu.ca/index.php/inlet <p><em>Inlet: Contributions to Archaeology</em> is a new open-access journal publishing articles related to the fields of archaeology, bioanthropology, and heritage. <em>Inlet</em> welcomes articles that communicate findings, reflect on new directions in the field, and disseminate information that may not fit under the purview of traditional publication venues. Its online publication format supports large amounts of multimedia supplementary information.</p> en-US ehogg@sfu.ca (Erin Hogg) Wed, 05 Sep 2018 16:49:05 -0700 OJS 3.1.0.0 http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss 60 Some like it hot https://journal.archpress.lib.sfu.ca/index.php/inlet/article/view/1 <p>Roasting features, also known as earth ovens, have been used by First Nations Peoples since the late Holocene to cook food for both immediate consumption and winter storage. Across southern British Columbia, earth ovens built by Salish communities in low and mid elevation meadows and riverine villages were part of carefully coordinated, multi-layered annual patterns of movement within the landscape to harvest and produce food. In this paper, we examine the patterning of floral—and to a lesser extent, faunal—data from earth oven complexes located in four village and four upland sites, finding differences between assemblages that appear to relate to the nature and diversity of use between site types. Our preliminary results support the contention that earth ovens in village contexts were used in more ways, and potentially by a wider array of cooks, than those in upland contexts. This analysis forms a first step towards a larger and more detailed study of earth oven technologies and use across southern British Columbia.</p> Natasha Lyons, Anna Marie Prentiss, Sandra Peacock, Bill Angelbeck ##submission.copyrightStatement## https://journal.archpress.lib.sfu.ca/index.php/inlet/article/view/1 Wed, 05 Sep 2018 00:00:00 -0700