ISBN-13: 9781407309057 / Angielski / Miękka / 2012 / 342 str.
From the Introduction: 'North Adak Island is a dichotomy of brute, natural beauty and a horrific example of what modern humans and war can do to a landscape. The island also contains what up until now has been largely untapped scientific data about the peoples who inhabited the island centuries prior to historic contact. The following scientific papers document the three-year effort to recover, analyse, and present that information to the Native American and scientific communities.' Introduction: The People Before: an Introduction to Adak, Alaska (Dixie West); 1) The Central Aleutians Archaeological and Paleobiological Project (Dixie West et al); 2) One Hundred Forty Years of Archaeology in the Central Aleutian Islands, Alaska (Douglas W. Veltre); 3) Did Holocene Paleoenvironmental Factors Affect Ancient Aleut Occupation and Settlement in the Central Aleutian Islands? (Lyn Gualtieri et al); 4) Holocene Tephra Layers on the Northern Half of Adak Island in The West-Central Aleutian Islands, Alaska (Mitsuru Okuno et al); 5) The Reconstruction of Ecosystems History of Adak Island (Aleutian Islands) During the Holocene (Arkady B. Savinetsky et al); 6) Archaeozoology of Adak Island: 6000 Years of Subsistence History in the Central Aleutians (Susan J. Crockford); 7) Ancient DNA Analysis for the Sea Otter (Enhydra lutris) from Archaeological Sites on Adak, Aleutian Islands (Shin Nishida et al); 8) Carbon, Nitrogen, and Oxygen Isotopic Composition of Bone Collagen and Tooth Enamel Carbonate of the Sea Otter (Enhydra lutris) from Archaeological Sites on Adak Island, Aleutian Archipelago (Ame Garong et al); 9) The Aleut Cockle, Clinocardium nuttallii (Conrad, 1837) from ADK-011, Adak Island, Alaska (Hiroko Koike et al); 10) Invertebrate Remains: a Pan Aleutian Comparison (Dixie West et al.); 11) Provenance of Obsidian Artifacts Recovered from Adak Island, Central Aleutian Islands: Evidence for Long-Distance Transport of Lithic Material (Kirsten Nicolaysen et al); 12) Six Thousand Years of Lithic Technology on Adak in a Broader Aleutian Context (Elizabeth G. Wilmerding and Virginia Hatfield); 13) Clam Lagoon Archaeology and Technology (Marvin Kay); 14) Griddlestones from Adak Island, Alaska: Their Provenance and the Biological Origins of Organic Residues from Cooking (Richard Jeannotte et al); 15) Bone Artifacts and Debris from Three Archaeological Sites on Adak Island, Alaska (Dixie West and Virginia Hatfield); 16) A Human Burial from the Andreanof Islands, Alaska (Dixie West et al); 17) Conclusions (Dixie West and Susan Crockford).