The first processual studies in archaeology began appearing-and making an impression on the field as a whole-nearly 30 years ago. These studies ushered in a revolution in American archaeology and forever changed how this field is taught and practiced. A great deal of heat was exchanged between the processualists and the traditionists as the new paradigm slowly was accepted into mainstream archaeology. Much of this heat was unfortunately expended uselessly as people spoke past one another both in person and in print. The processual school eventually won the struggle, and such studies today are themselves traditional. Efforts by a new group-the postprocessualists-now are being made to recast the goals of archaeology. These efforts are making ...
Review of: Power and Gender in Oneota Culture: A Study of a Late Prehistoric People. Berres, Thomas ...
This book is an outgrowth of a symposium presented at the 2005 Society for American Archaeology annu...
Bringing Back the Past consists of a collection of papers about the development of archaeology in Ca...
The first processual studies in archaeology began appearing-and making an impression on the field as...
Philip Duke and Michael Wilson have compiled a well-written, well-organized book designed to demons...
The field of archaeology incorporates a confusing assortment of ideas and approaches to the record. ...
This book is a tribute to the late Dr. Richard Forbis, the figure many Plains archaeologists regard ...
From the Pleistocene to the Holocene, edited by Bousman and Vierra, resets our thinking on the pace ...
Despite the relatively long legacy of professional archaeological research in the northern Great Pla...
Between 1970 and 1990 there was a burst of paleoethnobotanical research into prehistoric Native Amer...
This volume, edited by Stanley A. Ahler and Marvin Kay, consists of19 contributions by 21 authors. I...
In 1962 Lewis Binford (American Antiquity, 28 [2]:217-25) classified archaeological objects into tec...
Review of Dating Techniques for the Archaeologist, by Henry N. Michael and Elizabeth K. Ralph (eds.)...
Plains archaeologists have long awaited a worthy successor to Waldo Wedel\u27s magisterial Prehistor...
In this compact book, the outgrowth, or reprint, of his dissertation, Douglas Bamforth focuses his a...
Review of: Power and Gender in Oneota Culture: A Study of a Late Prehistoric People. Berres, Thomas ...
This book is an outgrowth of a symposium presented at the 2005 Society for American Archaeology annu...
Bringing Back the Past consists of a collection of papers about the development of archaeology in Ca...
The first processual studies in archaeology began appearing-and making an impression on the field as...
Philip Duke and Michael Wilson have compiled a well-written, well-organized book designed to demons...
The field of archaeology incorporates a confusing assortment of ideas and approaches to the record. ...
This book is a tribute to the late Dr. Richard Forbis, the figure many Plains archaeologists regard ...
From the Pleistocene to the Holocene, edited by Bousman and Vierra, resets our thinking on the pace ...
Despite the relatively long legacy of professional archaeological research in the northern Great Pla...
Between 1970 and 1990 there was a burst of paleoethnobotanical research into prehistoric Native Amer...
This volume, edited by Stanley A. Ahler and Marvin Kay, consists of19 contributions by 21 authors. I...
In 1962 Lewis Binford (American Antiquity, 28 [2]:217-25) classified archaeological objects into tec...
Review of Dating Techniques for the Archaeologist, by Henry N. Michael and Elizabeth K. Ralph (eds.)...
Plains archaeologists have long awaited a worthy successor to Waldo Wedel\u27s magisterial Prehistor...
In this compact book, the outgrowth, or reprint, of his dissertation, Douglas Bamforth focuses his a...
Review of: Power and Gender in Oneota Culture: A Study of a Late Prehistoric People. Berres, Thomas ...
This book is an outgrowth of a symposium presented at the 2005 Society for American Archaeology annu...
Bringing Back the Past consists of a collection of papers about the development of archaeology in Ca...