Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- History of archaeology (3)
- Iconography (3)
- Peruvian archaeology (3)
- Restaurants and Diners (3)
- Ancient technology (2)
-
- Archaic Period (2)
- Chavin (2)
- Ica (2)
- Local Businesses (2)
- Local history (2)
- Nasca (2)
- Punkuri (2)
- Adverse Early Childhood Experiences (1)
- Agricultural implements (1)
- Andean Archaeology (1)
- Andean archaeology (1)
- Archaeology of Bolivia (1)
- Archaeology of Chile (1)
- Archaeology of Peru (1)
- Artibeus harti (1)
- Artibeus jamaicensis (1)
- Bats (1)
- Beads (1)
- Cahuachi (1)
- Caribbean archaeology (1)
- Carl Troll (1)
- Carollia perspicillata (1)
- Cerro Blanco (1)
- Cerro Blanco site (1)
- Child Abuse (1)
- Publication Type
Articles 1 - 12 of 12
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
Salt, Vol. 8, No. 3, Salt Institute For Documentary Studies
Salt, Vol. 8, No. 3, Salt Institute For Documentary Studies
Salt Magazine Archive
The magazine about the really important people of Maine. On Custom House Wharf, life stays much the same. That’s the way Fonnie like it. Grime, fish, and sweat. Not a place for Yuppies.
Content
- 2 Eating in Maine
- 3 Spend a Semester with the Really Important People of Maine
- 5 View From Pier Road
- 7 Munjoy Hill’s Inside Scoop Renee’s Variety Store in Portland is the place to find out what’s going on around Mun joy Hill.
- 9 Jack of All Trades Al Buzzell’s grandfather told him, “Don’t learn one trade. Learn a dozen.” He took the advice.
- 12 Lost …
Salt, Vol. 8, No. 2, Salt Institute For Documentary Studies
Salt, Vol. 8, No. 2, Salt Institute For Documentary Studies
Salt Magazine Archive
The magazine about the really important people of Maine. Special Issue: Tourism. Seaside & Lakeside. Colonists & Coneheads. Six million people come to Maine on vacation each year. Do they make life better or worse for Mainers? How are they changing the state?
Content
- 2 Eating in Maine
- 3 View From Pier Road
- 6 Colonists and Coneheads Sociologist Peter I. Rose sees a caste system in tourism. Colonists are brahmins and coneheads (bus tourers) near the bottom of the heap.
- 8 Tourism: A Double Edged Sword What is tourism doing to “Vacationland” in the 1980s?
- 10 Tour Bus! A whimsical …
Salt, Vol. 8, No. 1, Salt Institute For Documentary Studies
Salt, Vol. 8, No. 1, Salt Institute For Documentary Studies
Salt Magazine Archive
The magazine about the really important people of Maine. This is Walter. The bear is Cuddles. Walter’s struggling to overcome child abuse. He’s also trying to find a home. The two may be the same.
Content
- 3 View From Pier Road
- 2 Eating In Maine A new feature, Salt’s guide to the really important places to eat in Maine.
- 6 Maine: Myth and Reality A special issue on what is the “real” Maine. Salt staff and students worked to find out. What they found is presented in three sections.
- 7 Being Young in Maine What is it like to be …
Editor's Preface, Daniel H. Sandweiss
Gary S. Vescelius (1930-1982), Richard L. Burger, Thomas F. Lynch
Gary S. Vescelius (1930-1982), Richard L. Burger, Thomas F. Lynch
Andean Past
No abstract provided.
Hunters Of The Dry Puna And The Salt Puna In Northern Chile, Calogero Santoro, Lautaro Nunez
Hunters Of The Dry Puna And The Salt Puna In Northern Chile, Calogero Santoro, Lautaro Nunez
Andean Past
No abstract provided.
Bats In South American Iconography, Elizabeth P. Benson
Bats In South American Iconography, Elizabeth P. Benson
Andean Past
No abstract provided.
Manufacture Of Beads And Spindle Whorls In Prehispanic Peru, Stuart V. Arnold
Manufacture Of Beads And Spindle Whorls In Prehispanic Peru, Stuart V. Arnold
Andean Past
No abstract provided.
Digging Sticks Or Daggerboards? A Functional Analysis Of Wooden Boards From The Ica Region, D. Peter Kvietok
Digging Sticks Or Daggerboards? A Functional Analysis Of Wooden Boards From The Ica Region, D. Peter Kvietok
Andean Past
No abstract provided.
Northeast Folklore Society Newsletter, Vol. 30, Northeast Archives Of Folklore And Oral History
Northeast Folklore Society Newsletter, Vol. 30, Northeast Archives Of Folklore And Oral History
Northeast Folklore Society Newsletter
On July 26, 1985 — almost two years ago! — Robert O. Walsh, now of Yuma, Arizona, wrote us in response to an account of an incident mentioned in Tom Tilton: Coaster and Fisherman (Northeast Folklore XXIII 1982), starting on page 62, in which he is identified only as "Pinhead." Here is his own account of that incident, and our thanks to him both for sending it and for being so patient in waiting for us to publish it...
Reconstructing The Evidence For Cerro Blanco And Punkuri, Richard E. Daggett
Reconstructing The Evidence For Cerro Blanco And Punkuri, Richard E. Daggett
Andean Past
No abstract provided.