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Author

Susan D. deFrance

Other affiliations: Museum of Science
Bio: Susan D. deFrance is an academic researcher from University of Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cavia & Pleistocene. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 47 publications receiving 1371 citations. Previous affiliations of Susan D. deFrance include Museum of Science.
Topics: Cavia, Pleistocene, Hutia, Domestication, Holocene

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Wetland research in northern Belize provides the earliest evidence for development of agriculture in the Maya Lowlands as discussed by the authors, which occurred in the context of a mixed foraging economy.
Abstract: Wetland research in northern Belize provides the earliest evidence for development of agriculture in the Maya Lowlands. Pollen data confirm the introduction of maize and manioc before 3000 B.C. Dramatic deforestation, beginning ca. 2500 B.C. and intensifying in wetland environments ca. 1500-1300 B.C., marks an expansion of agriculture, which occurred in the context of a mixed foraging economy. By 1000 B.C. a rise in groundwater levels led farmers to construct drainage ditches coeval with the emergence of Maya complex society ca. 1000-400 B.C. Field manipulations often involved minor modifications of natural hummocks. Canal systems are not as extensive in northern Belize as previously reported, nor is there evidence of artificially raised planting platforms. By the Classic period, wetland fields were flooded and mostly abandoned.

269 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article present a synthesis of zooarchaeological research published since the early 1990s that addresses political economy, status distinctions, and the ideological and ritual roles of animals in complex cultures.
Abstract: The zooarchaeology of complex societies provides insights into the interrelated social and economic relationships that people and animals created. I present a synthesis of zooarchaeological research published since the early 1990s that addresses political economy, status distinctions, and the ideological and ritual roles of animals in complex cultures. I address current approaches and applications as well as theoretical shifts in zooarchaeological practice. Research indicates there is great variability across space and time in how past peoples used animals to generate economic surplus, to establish status differentiation within societies, and to create symbolic meaning through sacrifices, offerings, and in feasts. The study of human/animal interactions in complex societies can contribute to fundamental questions of broad relevance regarding political and social life.

178 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the Ilo region of south coastal Peru, the authors of as mentioned in this paper have documented the existence of flood and debris-flow deposits produced by two El Nino events evidently much more severe than any in recent history.

130 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
25 Jul 2012-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: The results from the ancient DNA analyses of forty-eight archaeologically derived chicken bones provide support for archaeological hypotheses about the prehistoric human transport of chickens and lead to the proposal of four hypotheses which will require further scrutiny and rigorous future testing.
Abstract: Data from morphology, linguistics, history, and archaeology have all been used to trace the dispersal of chickens from Asian domestication centers to their current global distribution. Each provides a unique perspective which can aid in the reconstruction of prehistory. This study expands on previous investigations by adding a temporal component from ancient DNA and, in some cases, direct dating of bones of individual chickens from a variety of sites in Europe, the Pacific, and the Americas. The results from the ancient DNA analyses of forty-eight archaeologically derived chicken bones provide support for archaeological hypotheses about the prehistoric human transport of chickens. Haplogroup E mtDNA signatures have been amplified from directly dated samples originating in Europe at 1000 B.P. and in the Pacific at 3000 B.P. indicating multiple prehistoric dispersals from a single Asian centre. These two dispersal pathways converged in the Americas where chickens were introduced both by Polynesians and later by Europeans. The results of this study also highlight the inappropriate application of the small stretch of D-loop, traditionally amplified for use in phylogenetic studies, to understanding discrete episodes of chicken translocation in the past. The results of this study lead to the proposal of four hypotheses which will require further scrutiny and rigorous future testing.

129 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The state-sponsored Wari incursion, described here, entailed large-scale agrarian reclamation to sustain the occupation of two hills and the adjacent high mesa of Cerro Baúl and final evacuation of theBaúl enclave was accompanied by elaborate ceremonies.
Abstract: Before the Inca reigned, two empires held sway over the central Andes from anno Domini 600 to 1000: the Wari empire to the north ruled much of Peru, and Tiwanaku to the south reigned in Bolivia. Face-to-face contact came when both colonized the Moquegua Valley sierra in southern Peru. The state-sponsored Wari incursion, described here, entailed large-scale agrarian reclamation to sustain the occupation of two hills and the adjacent high mesa of Cerro Baul. Monumental buildings were erected atop the mesa to serve an embassy-like delegation of nobles and attendant personnel that endured for centuries. Final evacuation of the Baul enclave was accompanied by elaborate ceremonies with brewing, drinking, feasting, vessel smashing, and building burning.

106 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Preface to the Princeton Landmarks in Biology Edition vii Preface xi Symbols used xiii 1.
Abstract: Preface to the Princeton Landmarks in Biology Edition vii Preface xi Symbols Used xiii 1. The Importance of Islands 3 2. Area and Number of Speicies 8 3. Further Explanations of the Area-Diversity Pattern 19 4. The Strategy of Colonization 68 5. Invasibility and the Variable Niche 94 6. Stepping Stones and Biotic Exchange 123 7. Evolutionary Changes Following Colonization 145 8. Prospect 181 Glossary 185 References 193 Index 201

14,171 citations

01 Jan 1980
TL;DR: In this article, the influence of diet on the distribution of nitrogen isotopes in animals was investigated by analyzing animals grown in the laboratory on diets of constant nitrogen isotopic composition and found that the variability of the relationship between the δ^(15)N values of animals and their diets is greater for different individuals raised on the same diet than for the same species raised on different diets.
Abstract: The influence of diet on the distribution of nitrogen isotopes in animals was investigated by analyzing animals grown in the laboratory on diets of constant nitrogen isotopic composition. The isotopic composition of the nitrogen in an animal reflects the nitrogen isotopic composition of its diet. The δ^(15)N values of the whole bodies of animals are usually more positive than those of their diets. Different individuals of a species raised on the same diet can have significantly different δ^(15)N values. The variability of the relationship between the δ^(15)N values of animals and their diets is greater for different species raised on the same diet than for the same species raised on different diets. Different tissues of mice are also enriched in ^(15)N relative to the diet, with the difference between the δ^(15)N values of a tissue and the diet depending on both the kind of tissue and the diet involved. The δ^(15)N values of collagen and chitin, biochemical components that are often preserved in fossil animal remains, are also related to the δ^(15)N value of the diet. The dependence of the δ^(15)N values of whole animals and their tissues and biochemical components on the δ^(15)N value of diet indicates that the isotopic composition of animal nitrogen can be used to obtain information about an animal's diet if its potential food sources had different δ^(15)N values. The nitrogen isotopic method of dietary analysis probably can be used to estimate the relative use of legumes vs non-legumes or of aquatic vs terrestrial organisms as food sources for extant and fossil animals. However, the method probably will not be applicable in those modern ecosystems in which the use of chemical fertilizers has influenced the distribution of nitrogen isotopes in food sources. The isotopic method of dietary analysis was used to reconstruct changes in the diet of the human population that occupied the Tehuacan Valley of Mexico over a 7000 yr span. Variations in the δ^(15)C and δ^(15)N values of bone collagen suggest that C_4 and/or CAM plants (presumably mostly corn) and legumes (presumably mostly beans) were introduced into the diet much earlier than suggested by conventional archaeological analysis.

5,548 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Caroline M. Pond1
TL;DR: This book is based on a symposium organized by the Entomological Society of America in 1980 and will prove to be an important book in bringing together recent research on the mating systems of orthopterans, and discussing their behaviour in the light of current theory in behavioura].

911 citations

Book
01 Nov 2005
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present an efficient reduction from constrained to unconstrained maximum agreement subtree for the maximum quartet consistency problem, which can be solved by using semi-definite programming.
Abstract: Expression.- Spectral Clustering Gene Ontology Terms to Group Genes by Function.- Dynamic De-Novo Prediction of microRNAs Associated with Cell Conditions: A Search Pruned by Expression.- Clustering Gene Expression Series with Prior Knowledge.- A Linear Time Biclustering Algorithm for Time Series Gene Expression Data.- Time-Window Analysis of Developmental Gene Expression Data with Multiple Genetic Backgrounds.- Phylogeny.- A Lookahead Branch-and-Bound Algorithm for the Maximum Quartet Consistency Problem.- Computing the Quartet Distance Between Trees of Arbitrary Degree.- Using Semi-definite Programming to Enhance Supertree Resolvability.- An Efficient Reduction from Constrained to Unconstrained Maximum Agreement Subtree.- Pattern Identification in Biogeography.- On the Complexity of Several Haplotyping Problems.- A Hidden Markov Technique for Haplotype Reconstruction.- Algorithms for Imperfect Phylogeny Haplotyping (IPPH) with a Single Homoplasy or Recombination Event.- Networks.- A Faster Algorithm for Detecting Network Motifs.- Reaction Motifs in Metabolic Networks.- Reconstructing Metabolic Networks Using Interval Analysis.- Genome Rearrangements.- A 1.375-Approximation Algorithm for Sorting by Transpositions.- A New Tight Upper Bound on the Transposition Distance.- Perfect Sorting by Reversals Is Not Always Difficult.- Minimum Recombination Histories by Branch and Bound.- Sequences.- A Unifying Framework for Seed Sensitivity and Its Application to Subset Seeds.- Generalized Planted (l,d)-Motif Problem with Negative Set.- Alignment of Tandem Repeats with Excision, Duplication, Substitution and Indels (EDSI).- The Peres-Shields Order Estimator for Fixed and Variable Length Markov Models with Applications to DNA Sequence Similarity.- Multiple Structural RNA Alignment with Lagrangian Relaxation.- Faster Algorithms for Optimal Multiple Sequence Alignment Based on Pairwise Comparisons.- Ortholog Clustering on a Multipartite Graph.- Linear Time Algorithm for Parsing RNA Secondary Structure.- A Compressed Format for Collections of Phylogenetic Trees and Improved Consensus Performance.- Structure.- Optimal Protein Threading by Cost-Splitting.- Efficient Parameterized Algorithm for Biopolymer Structure-Sequence Alignment.- Rotamer-Pair Energy Calculations Using a Trie Data Structure.- Improved Maintenance of Molecular Surfaces Using Dynamic Graph Connectivity.- The Main Structural Regularities of the Sandwich Proteins.- Discovery of Protein Substructures in EM Maps.

492 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 1936

484 citations