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1 June 2014 Subsistence activities at 19th-century shore whaling station sites in New Zealand and Australia: a zooarchaeological perspective
Tiffany James-Lee
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Abstract

This paper examines food subsistence activity patterns in five 19th-century shore whaling stations in New Zealand and Australia. Faunal data are categorised into indigenous and exotic classes and possible explanations behind differing patterns of subsistence activities between sites and their immediate local contexts are explored. Zooarchaeological analyses show that the communities of these whaling station communities supplemented their whaling rations with indigenous and exotic domestic species to varying degrees.

© Publications Scientifiques du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris.
Tiffany James-Lee "Subsistence activities at 19th-century shore whaling station sites in New Zealand and Australia: a zooarchaeological perspective," Anthropozoologica 49(1), 79-98, (1 June 2014). https://doi.org/10.5252/az2014n1a06
Published: 1 June 2014
JOURNAL ARTICLE
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KEYWORDS
19th century
Australia
Australie
diet
New Zealand
Nouvelle-Zélande
régime alimentaire
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