10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «STONE BOILING»
Discover the use of
stone boiling in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
stone boiling and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Anasazi America: Seventeen Centuries on the Road from Center ...
It has long been assumed that the rapid switch from stone boiling to ceramic
cooking once pottery was available at the end of the Southwest's Basketmaker II
phase (300–400 CE) was in part because stone boiling is much less efficient.
2
Archaic Societies: Diversity and Complexity across the ...
Innovations in food processing also occurred in the Midwest at approximately this
same time, with the introduction of stone boiling evidenced archaeologically by
large quantities of FCR (cf. Fishel 2000; Fishel et al. 2003). The initial part of the ...
Thomas E. Emerson, Thomas E. Emerson, Dale L. McElrath, Andrew C. Fortier, Dale L. McElrath, 2012
3
Encyclopedia of Kitchen History
The Apache and Gros Ventres of the Great Plains did their stone boiling in a
waterfilled hole in the ground. The Lakota of the the Great Plains reserved a
buffalo stomach for roasting meat with tubers and berries. Similarly, the Dogrib of
the ...
Mary Ellen Snodgrass, 2004
4
Flint chips, a guide to pre-historic archæology, as ...
The use of pits such as those at Highfield, for winter habitations and for granaries,
by the ancient Germans, Armenians, and other people is noticed by Mr. Spurrell.
Stone-Boiling. An account of the various modes of " stone-boiling " practised by ...
Edward Thomas Stevens, 1870
5
A PERSISTENT PLACE: A LANDSCAPE APPROACH TO THE PREHISTORIC ...
Specifically, the high frequency of denser granite and quartzite FCR in Late
Archaic features is interpreted as representing a heavy reliance on stone boiling
as a primary cooking technique. Stone boiling is associated with the preparation
of a ...
Indirect-heat cooking, or “stone boiling,” is a moist cooking technique that
predates the beginnings of pottery making by many millennia. Archaeological
evidence for stone boiling is often ubiquitous. Clastic materials like granite,
quartz, ...
Marcia-Anne Dobres, John Robb, 2014
7
The Archaeology of China: From the Late Paleolithic to the ...
In view of these observations, it may not be only coincidental that the Shangshan
pottery basins show all the prescribed characteristics ofvessels used for stone-
boiling. It is also worth noting that, among some Native Americans in California, ...
Li Liu, Xingcan Chen, 2012
8
Ceramic Theory and Cultural Process
The use of ceramic vessels also requires less effort and attention than indirect
methods of cooking like stone boiling in vessels of basketry, wood or hide (Driver,
1969:90; Ikawa-Smith, 1976:514; Van Camp, 1979:74). Stone boiling requires ...
9
The Bench Deposits at Berger Bluff: Early Holocene-Late ...
Boiling was most common for cultures with ceramics, but most hunter-gatherers
were probably familiar with stone boiling in perishable containers (there is no
evidence of stone boiling in the bench deposits, nor were local stones very
suitable ...
Kenneth Martin Brown, 2006
10
Light from Ancient Campfires: Archaeological Evidence for ...
It is during this time period that certain areas across the Plains begin to be
inhabited for the first time since the onset of the Hypsithermal interval. As well, the
earliest evidence of stone boiling occurs with the Estevan phase, as large
amounts of ...
Trevor Richard Peck, 2011