The Beads That Did Not Buy Manhattan Island, 2010 Syracuse University
The Beads That Did Not Buy Manhattan Island, Peter Francis Jr.
BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers
The purchase of Manhattan Island is an unrecorded event dressed in mystery and myth. An examination of the myth and of its history corrects misconceptions that are nearly as ancient as the purchase.
Front Matter, 2010 Syracuse University
Beads: Journal Of The Society Of Bead Researchers - Volume 22 (Complete), 2010 Syracuse University
Beads: Journal Of The Society Of Bead Researchers - Volume 22 (Complete)
BEADS: Journal of the Society of Bead Researchers
No abstract provided.
Women Of New France 2: Needle Arts, 2010 Western Michigan University
Women Of New France 2: Needle Arts, Stacey Moore, Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project
Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project
Panel 2. Clothing Production and Repair, Weaving, and Sewing.
Women Of New France 6: Education And Literacy, 2010 Western Michigan University
Women Of New France 6: Education And Literacy, Stacey Moore, Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project
Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project
Panel 6. Education and Literacy.
Women Of New France 4: Cooking, 2010 Western Michigan University
Women Of New France 4: Cooking, Stacey Moore, Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project
Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project
Panel 4. On the Table and Open Hearth Cooking.
Women Of New France 8: Women And Servitude, 2010 Western Michigan University
Women Of New France 8: Women And Servitude, Stacey Moore, Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project
Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project
Panel 8. Women of New France Who Served as Slaves and Servants.
Women Of New France 5: Music, Dance, And Diversions, 2010 Western Michigan University
Women Of New France 5: Music, Dance, And Diversions, Stacey Moore, Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project
Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project
Panel 5. Music, Dance, and Diversions.
Prehistoric Sandals Of The Southern High Plains: Indicators Of Cultural Affinity And Change, 2010 University of Denver
Prehistoric Sandals Of The Southern High Plains: Indicators Of Cultural Affinity And Change, Allison N. Rexroth
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Perishable artifacts, such as basketry, cordage, and sandals are rare cultural materials due to the environments in which they are preserved and their inherent non-durability. Where recovered, researchers have used them to study expressed identity and trace population movements over time and space. On this premise, previously un-described sandal assemblages from Trinchera Cave, Colorado and the Kenton Caves, Oklahoma/New Mexico were age dated, analyzed, and compared to other known sandal collections throughout North America, including Franktown Cave, Colorado. The study of the rare perishables from all three caves/rockshelters on the Southern High Plains have provided a unique opportunity for the …
Cultural And Contextual Differentiation Of Mesoamerican Iconography In The Southwest/Northwest, 2010 Brigham Young University - Provo
Cultural And Contextual Differentiation Of Mesoamerican Iconography In The Southwest/Northwest, Michael T. Searcy
Faculty Publications
Ample research has documented the long-term interaction between Mesoamerica and the U.S. Southwest/Northwest Mexico (SW/NW). Nelson (2006:345) has used the phrase "Mesoamerican interaction markers" as a way to describe evidence of this contact in the SW/NW. He further defines these as "a variety of archaeological patterns that are reminiscent of Mesoamerican counterparts" including "objects, practices, and styles." Some of the interaction markers that have been studied at length are trade goods such as copper bells, macaws, shell, and iron pyrite mirrors (Bayman 2002; Bradley 1993; Ericson and Baugh 1993; Kelley 1966, 1995; Mathien 1993; McGuire 1993b; Nelson 2000; Riley 2005). …
People Of Deir El-Medineh: A Preliminary Paleopathology Study, 2010 The American University in Cairo AUC
People Of Deir El-Medineh: A Preliminary Paleopathology Study, Lisa Sabbahy Dr.
Faculty Journal Articles
No abstract provided.
Villagers And Archaeologists: An Examination Of Past Behaviors At The Barton Site (21gd02), 2010 Minnesota State University, Mankato
Villagers And Archaeologists: An Examination Of Past Behaviors At The Barton Site (21gd02), Emily Hildebrant
All Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Other Capstone Projects
After a 40 year hiatus, excavations at the Bartron site (21GD02) resumed from May 2008 through June 2008 with new research questions. The primary impetus for this research was an investigation into the nature of the reported wall trench structure (Feature 13), one of the characteristics of the site previously cited as evidence of Mississippian contact or influence in the Red Wing Locality. This structure was hypothesized to be part of Pierre Charles Le Sueur's 1694/95 overwintering post on the southern end of Prairie Island. When excavated three centimeters below the previously excavated depth, the proposed wall trench structure was …
Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene Colonization And Regionalization In Northern Perú: Fishtail And Paiján Complexes Of The Lower Jequetepeque Valley, 2010 University of Kentucky
Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene Colonization And Regionalization In Northern Perú: Fishtail And Paiján Complexes Of The Lower Jequetepeque Valley, Greg J. Maggard
University of Kentucky Doctoral Dissertations
Until relatively recently, the view of Late Pleistocene hunter-gatherers in the Americas was dominated by the “Clovis-first” paradigm. However, recent discoveries have challenged traditional views and forced reconsiderations of the timing, processes, and scales used in modeling the settlement of the Americas. Chief among these discoveries has been the recognition of a wide range of early cultural diversity throughout the Americas that is inconsistent with previously held notions of cultural homogeneity.
During the Late Pleistocene-Early Holocene, the development of widely varying economic, technological and mobility strategies in distinct environments is suggestive of a range of different adaptations and traditions.
It …
Three Decades In The Cold And Wet: A Career In Northern Archaeology, 2010 Brooklyn College, City University of New York
Three Decades In The Cold And Wet: A Career In Northern Archaeology, Sophia Perdikaris, George Hambrecht, Ramona Harrison
School of Global Integrative Studies: Faculty Publications
Thomas H. McGovern has been a pioneering researcher in the North Atlantic region for most of the past 40 years. He has taken his specialty in zooarchaeology beyond counting bones to actually addressing questions about human environment interactions and human response to extreme environmental events. A prolific writer and researcher with a multitude of publications and an impressive funding record, McGovern has always been a proponent of multidisciplinarity and international collaboration. His vision resulted in the creation of the North Atlantic Biocultural Organization (NABO) that currently has more than 400 scientific partners and has been leading projects throughout the Circum …
Feminine Identity Confined: The Archaeology Of Japanese Women At Amache, A Wwii Internment Camp, 2010 University of Denver
Feminine Identity Confined: The Archaeology Of Japanese Women At Amache, A Wwii Internment Camp, Dana Ogo Shew
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
In 1942, approximately 120,000 people of Japanese ancestry were evacuated from the West Coast to ten different internment camps in the interior of the United States. One of these camps was the Granada Relocation Center, otherwise known as Amache, located in southeastern Colorado. Through the analysis of archaeological material, archival documents, and oral histories, this thesis explores the experiences of Japanese American women interned at Amache. Feminine identity was greatly changed and redefined during confinement. These changes in feminine identity are examined in the public and private arenas of daily life within confinement. The construction of new and altered individual …
The End Of Farming In The “Northern Periphery” Of The Southwest, 2010 Brigham Young University - Provo
The End Of Farming In The “Northern Periphery” Of The Southwest, James R. Allison
Faculty Publications
Prehispanic farmers belonging to the Virgin and Fremont traditions once occupied most of Utah and adjacent parts of Arizona and Nevada. Through much of the twentieth century, these areas were called the "Northern Periphery'' of the Southwest, but in recent decades, both Fremont and Virgin have often been left out of syntheses of southwestern archaeology-even though they clearly had strong connections to the Southwest and represented, respectively, the northernmost and westernmost extensions of maize-based horticulture in western North America. This exclusion results from a combination of factors, the most important of which are geography and the territorial behavior of some …
Ua1b1/1 Rodes-Helm Lecture Series, 2010 Western Kentucky University
Ua1b1/1 Rodes-Helm Lecture Series, Wku Archives
WKU Archives Collection Inventories
These records were created by and about the Rodes-Helm Lecture Series which invited distinguished, and prominent individuals from the spheres of politics, economics, and the arts, to lecture at the university. The records include programs, and recordings of lectures.
Puebloan Sites In The Hidden Hills, 2010 Brigham Young University - Provo
Puebloan Sites In The Hidden Hills, James R. Allison
Faculty Publications
In 2006 and 2007, the Brigham Young University Archaeological Field School worked in the Hidden Hills area of the Shivwits Plateau, in the western part of the Arizona Strip. The field school mapped, surface collected, and tested a number of Puebloan habitation sites dating from about A.D. 800 to the late 1200s. Architecture includes surface room blocks, stand-alone circular structures, and pit structures, including one deep masonry-lined pit structure that may be a kiva. Ceramic analysis shows that the Hidden Hills residents participated in ceramic exchange networks encompassing other parts of the Arizona Strip as well as more distant places.
Consultation And Collaboration With Descendant Communities, 2009 University of Massachusetts Boston
Consultation And Collaboration With Descendant Communities, Stephen Silliman, T.J. Ferguson
Stephen W. Silliman
No abstract provided.
Thinking And Drinking Chocolate: The Origins, Distribution, And Significance Of Cacao In Mesoamerica, 2009 Western University
Thinking And Drinking Chocolate: The Origins, Distribution, And Significance Of Cacao In Mesoamerica, Diana Moreiras Reynaga
Diana K Moreiras Reynaga
This paper examines cacao’s (Theobroma cacao L.) physical and chemical composition, ecology, distribution and habitat and summarizes the recent archaeological research on cacao, mapping its distribution as shown by various lines of archaeological evidence. Existing hypotheses for cacao’s spread are discussed and illustrated using a GIS mapping of detailed topographic maps of South and Central America. By focusing on the potential paths which cacao could have been transported and grown (at elevations ranging from sea-level to 1000 m) it is possible to eliminate many previously proposed routes, and pinpoint the most likely locations for the cacao’s earliest and subsequent dispersals. …