Time, Space, &
Form in Biological Conservation: Zooarchaeological Perspectives from Deep Time
Society of Ethnobiology 2010: Victoria, BC
Session Abstract
Paper Abstracts
Steve Wolverton - Going to the Mountain: Conservation, Ethics, and Applied Paleozoology
Jack Frazier - Shallow Time or Old Bones? Which Way Out of the Conservation Maze?
Heather Thakar - Ancient Actions Predict Modern Consequences: Prehistoric Lessons in Species-specific Shellfish Intensification
Evan Peacock - Freshwater Mussel
Remains and Their Use in the Conservation of an Imperiled Fauna
Charles Randklev - Paleozoological Implications of Late Holocene Unionid
Remains from the Upper Trinity River, North Texas
Torben Rick, Jon Erlandson, & Todd Braje - Archaeology, Ancient Anthropogenic Land and Seascapes, and Contemporary
Ecosystem Management on California’s Channel Islands
Andrew Barker - Archaeological Protein Residues: A New Line of
Evidence in Conservation Science
Iain McKechnie - Communicating the Scale, Intensity, and Implications of Ancient
Maritime Economies On and Around Vancouver Island using Zooarchaeological Data
Corinne Rosania - Utility of Paleozoological Data for Modern Management of Historically Extirpated North American Black Bears (Ursus
americanus)
Lisa Nagaoka - Conservation
Implications of New Zealand Fur Seal Morphometric Data
Karen Schollmeyer & Jon Driver - The Past, Present, and Future of Small
Terrestrial Mammals in Human Diets
Nova Pierson - The Smaller Picture: Pre-Contact Forage
Fish Use and its Implications for Modern Conservation
Megan Joyce - Constructing Nature: Evaluating
the Aesthetic of ‘the Natural’ in the Service of Paleozoology