P. Prince, Dating and interpreting pine cambium collection scars from two parts of the Nechako River drainage, British Columbia, J ARCH SCI, 28(3), 2001, pp. 253-263
Pine cambium is a food resource that was regularly utilized by foraging pop
ulations of the interior of British Columbia from at least AD 1790 to 1950.
The scars left on living pine trees (Culturally Modified Trees, or CMTs) b
y cambium stripping are directly datable evidence for this subsistence acti
vity by utilizing forestry increment borers to extract cores. Further, pine
cambium is generally regarded as a marginal, or supplementary resource, wi
th changes in the frequency of cambium collection being related to natural
cycles in the abundance of staple resources. This paper discusses the datin
g of these subsistence features, and in comparing two areas of the Nechako
River drainage of British Columbia, suggests that pine cambium was more int
ensively utilized in areas lacking salmon, the staple of the greater region
. Copyright 2001 Academic Press