Abstract

The Promontory caves (Utah) and Franktown Cave (Colorado) contain high-fidelity records of short-term occupations by groups with material culture connections to the Subarctic/Northern Plains. This research uses Promontory and Franktown bison dung, hair, hide, and bone collagen to establish local baseline carbon isotopic variability and identify leather from a distant source. The ankle wrap of one Promontory Cave 1 moccasin had a δ13C value that indicates a substantial C4component to the animal's diet, unlike the C3diets inferred from 171 other Promontory and northern Utah bison samples. We draw on a unique combination of multitissue isotopic analysis, carbon isoscapes, ancient DNA (species and sex identification), tissue turnover rates, archaeological contexts, and bison ecology to show that the high δ13C value was not likely a result of local plant consumption, bison mobility, or trade. Instead, the bison hide was likely acquired via long-distance travel to/from an area of abundant C4grasses far to the south or east. Expansive landscape knowledge gained through long-distance associations would have allowed Promontory caves inhabitants to make well-informed decisions about directions and routes of movement for a territorial shift, which seems to have occurred in the late thirteenth century.

Highlights

  • The Promontory caves (Utah) and Franktown Cave (Colorado) contain high-fidelity records of short-term occupations by groups with material culture connections to the Subarctic/Northern Plains

  • We examine the significance of this isotopically unusual moccasin leather. Is it feasible that its high δ13C value came from a bison consuming plants near the Promontory caves? Or did it come from somewhere else? If so, where? To address these questions, we present a local carbon isotope baseline of 157 samples of Promontory caves bison dung, hair, hide, and bone collagen; 14 samples of modern Antelope Island bison hair and dung; and 8 samples of Promontory-era Franktown Cave bison hair and hide (Figure 1)

  • The FS-305 sample, which produced the outlying δ13C value that inspired this study, came from an ankle wrap remnant on a fragmentary moccasin recovered from Promontory Cave 1 (Figure 3a)

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Summary

Introduction

The Promontory caves (Utah) and Franktown Cave (Colorado) contain high-fidelity records of short-term occupations by groups with material culture connections to the Subarctic/Northern Plains. This research uses Promontory and Franktown bison dung, hair, hide, and bone collagen to establish local baseline carbon isotopic variability and identify leather from a distant source. Las cuevas Promontory (Utah) y la Cueva Franktown (Colorado) contienen registros de alta fidelidad en cuanto a las ocupaciones de corto término de grupos humanos con cultura material conectada al Subártico/Planicies del Norte. Pelo, piel de cuero y colágeno del hueso de bisonte provenientes de los sitios Promontory y Franktown para establecer una base de datos isotópicos locales y variabilidad isotópica de carbono e identifica la piel de cuero de procedencia lejana. Meridian Boulevard, Suite 400, Englewood, CO 80112, USA Fiona Brock ▪ Cranfield Forensic Institute, Cranfield University, Defence Academy of the United Kingdom, Shrivenham SN6

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