Encyclopedia

kitchen midden

kitchen midden, refuse heap left by a prehistoric settlement; more specifically, a deposit consisting primarily of discarded shell and related cultural material in coastal environments. First studied (1848) in Denmark, middens are an important source of ecological and cultural information. Kitchen middens, generally known as shell mounds in the Americas, usually date from the late Mesolithic period. Their contents include artifacts that can be dated, suggesting the mode of life and technology of ancient peoples. Analysis of animal remains can indicate the climate, season, length of occupation, hunting patterns, and the possible presence of domestication. Such middens generally represent only one component of a complex foraging strategy of migratory hunter-gatherers.

The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2007, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.

More on kitchen midden from Fact Monster:

  • shell mound - shell mound shell mound, in archaeology, a mound consisting largely of the shells of edible ...
  • Mesolithic period - Mesolithic period Mesolithic period or Middle Stone Age,period in human development between the end ...
  • Encyclopedia: Archaeology: General - Encyclopeadia articles concerning Archaeology: General.
  • archaeology: Modern Archaeology - Modern Archaeology In contrast to the antiquarianism of classical archaeology, anthropological ...
  • Midden - Midden The kitchen midden. The dust-bin. The farmer's midden is the dunghill. The word is ...

See more Encyclopedia articles on: Archaeology: General

© 2000–2008 Pearson Education, publishing as Fact Monster