Plains archaeologists have long awaited a worthy successor to Waldo Wedel\u27s magisterial Prehistoric Man on the Great Plains (1961). W. Raymond Wood\u27s edited volume pretty much fills the master\u27s very large shoes. As befits the increase in the size of the database and our understanding of the complexity of cultural dynamics on the Plains since Wedel\u27s publication, the fourteen topics into which the book is divided are each examined by different collaborators: Introduction (W. Raymond Wood); The Great Plains Setting (Marvin Kay); A History of Great Plains Prehistory (Richard A. Krause); The Paleo-Indian Cultures of the Great Plains (Jack L. Hofman and Russell W. Graham); The Northwestern and Northern Plains Archaic (Geor...
Written in a clear, concise manner and profusely illustrated, Vance Holliday\u27s book introduces th...
This book is a tribute to the late Dr. Richard Forbis, the figure many Plains archaeologists regard ...
While its title purports the work to cover the North American Plains, it is, in fact, almost entirel...
Plains archaeologists have long awaited a worthy successor to Waldo Wedel\u27s magisterial Prehistor...
This volume emerged from the 1992 symposium Geoarchaeological Research in the Great Plains: A Histo...
This volume emerged from the 1992 symposium Geoarchaeological Research in the Great Plains: A Histo...
This useful collection of review essays issues from the 34th Plains Conference, entitled Anthropolo...
Despite the relatively long legacy of professional archaeological research in the northern Great Pla...
Despite the relatively long legacy of professional archaeological research in the northern Great Pla...
Nomadic Plains peoples such as the Cheyenne and Sioux have become the stereotypical image of North A...
Nomadic Plains peoples such as the Cheyenne and Sioux have become the stereotypical image of North A...
Review of: "A White-Bearded Plainsman: The Memoirs of Archaeologist W. Raymond Wood," by W. Raymond ...
Review of: A White-Bearded Plainsman: The Memoirs of Archaeologist W. Raymond Wood, by W. Raymond ...
INDIANS AND ANTHROPOLOGISTS To say that the Plains volume of the Smithsonian Institution\u27s Handbo...
Review of: "A White-Bearded Plainsman: The Memoirs of Archaeologist W. Raymond Wood," by W. Raymond ...
Written in a clear, concise manner and profusely illustrated, Vance Holliday\u27s book introduces th...
This book is a tribute to the late Dr. Richard Forbis, the figure many Plains archaeologists regard ...
While its title purports the work to cover the North American Plains, it is, in fact, almost entirel...
Plains archaeologists have long awaited a worthy successor to Waldo Wedel\u27s magisterial Prehistor...
This volume emerged from the 1992 symposium Geoarchaeological Research in the Great Plains: A Histo...
This volume emerged from the 1992 symposium Geoarchaeological Research in the Great Plains: A Histo...
This useful collection of review essays issues from the 34th Plains Conference, entitled Anthropolo...
Despite the relatively long legacy of professional archaeological research in the northern Great Pla...
Despite the relatively long legacy of professional archaeological research in the northern Great Pla...
Nomadic Plains peoples such as the Cheyenne and Sioux have become the stereotypical image of North A...
Nomadic Plains peoples such as the Cheyenne and Sioux have become the stereotypical image of North A...
Review of: "A White-Bearded Plainsman: The Memoirs of Archaeologist W. Raymond Wood," by W. Raymond ...
Review of: A White-Bearded Plainsman: The Memoirs of Archaeologist W. Raymond Wood, by W. Raymond ...
INDIANS AND ANTHROPOLOGISTS To say that the Plains volume of the Smithsonian Institution\u27s Handbo...
Review of: "A White-Bearded Plainsman: The Memoirs of Archaeologist W. Raymond Wood," by W. Raymond ...
Written in a clear, concise manner and profusely illustrated, Vance Holliday\u27s book introduces th...
This book is a tribute to the late Dr. Richard Forbis, the figure many Plains archaeologists regard ...
While its title purports the work to cover the North American Plains, it is, in fact, almost entirel...