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Ancient Miamians: The Tequesta of South Florida
Hardback

Ancient Miamians: The Tequesta of South Florida

$90.99
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Focusing on the Native Americans the Spanish called Tequesta and their ancestors, Ancient Miamians covers the 10,000 years from 8,000 B.C. to A.D. 1761, painting a vivid word portrait of a resident from each of six eras as they make tools, obtain food, deal with their fellow humans, and seek harmony with the forces that govern their lives. From first light to evening firelight, McGoun presents for the non-specialist a series of narratives depicting a single day in each of the lives of six typical men and women who once lived on the land around presentday Biscayne Bay. This concise and readable tale of the remarkable predecessors of Miami-Dade’s current 2 million residents is the first such treatment of Florida’s pre-European and early historic native people. Without violating archaeological fact, McGoun includes the major cultural periods and significant archaeological sites in the region, all in terms of day-to-day life rendered in engaging narrative. The story begins with the first settlers, who moved down the Florida peninsula more than 10 millennia ago, pursuing large animals that are now mostly extinct. It draws to a close with the 250 years that saw the Tequesta themselves become extinct, beginning with a time when
the English and their friends just won’t take ‘Go away’ for an answer, and they become such pests that finally even the Spaniards look good, or at least better.
Bibliographic summaries allow readers to extend the scope of their exploration beyond this fictiorialized reconstruction of prehistoric culture.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University Press of Florida
Country
United States
Date
23 May 2002
Pages
128
ISBN
9780813024950

Focusing on the Native Americans the Spanish called Tequesta and their ancestors, Ancient Miamians covers the 10,000 years from 8,000 B.C. to A.D. 1761, painting a vivid word portrait of a resident from each of six eras as they make tools, obtain food, deal with their fellow humans, and seek harmony with the forces that govern their lives. From first light to evening firelight, McGoun presents for the non-specialist a series of narratives depicting a single day in each of the lives of six typical men and women who once lived on the land around presentday Biscayne Bay. This concise and readable tale of the remarkable predecessors of Miami-Dade’s current 2 million residents is the first such treatment of Florida’s pre-European and early historic native people. Without violating archaeological fact, McGoun includes the major cultural periods and significant archaeological sites in the region, all in terms of day-to-day life rendered in engaging narrative. The story begins with the first settlers, who moved down the Florida peninsula more than 10 millennia ago, pursuing large animals that are now mostly extinct. It draws to a close with the 250 years that saw the Tequesta themselves become extinct, beginning with a time when
the English and their friends just won’t take ‘Go away’ for an answer, and they become such pests that finally even the Spaniards look good, or at least better.
Bibliographic summaries allow readers to extend the scope of their exploration beyond this fictiorialized reconstruction of prehistoric culture.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
University Press of Florida
Country
United States
Date
23 May 2002
Pages
128
ISBN
9780813024950