This volume is a capstone of George W. Gill’s long and productive (and continuing) career at the University of Wyoming, where he has spent the last three and a half decades teaching and in pursuit of the data encapsulated here. Contributions from 21 scholars, most of them his students, present studies of bioarchaeology and skeletal biology, especially in the fields of demography, pathology, and morphology. The 19 chapters (and the introductory comments by William M. Bass, Douglas H. Ubelaker, and the senior editor) cover 10,000 years on the Northwestern Plains, from the Archaic period to historic times, encompassing studies of Native Americans, Euro-American pioneers and military men, and Chinese laborers. Basic skeletal data are provided f...
Despite the relatively long legacy of professional archaeological research in the northern Great Pla...
This book is an outgrowth of a symposium presented at the 2005 Society for American Archaeology annu...
Plains archaeologists have long awaited a worthy successor to Waldo Wedel\u27s magisterial Prehistor...
First paragraph: The editors and contributors to this large, impressive volume present thirty-two ch...
For a little over 75 years, Colorado has played host to important discoveries regarding the peopling...
Douglas Bamforth and his colleagues demonstrate in this edited volume the valuable role in modern ar...
This volume emerged from the 1992 symposium Geoarchaeological Research in the Great Plains: A Histo...
In 1962 Lewis Binford (American Antiquity, 28 [2]:217-25) classified archaeological objects into tec...
With his latest book Meadows has made a significant contribution to our understanding of Native Amer...
Archaeology is often described as detective work. In this detailed exploration of the High Plains of...
Theodore Binnema\u27s engaging ethnohistorical account of the peoples who once lived upon the Northw...
Mammals of the Northern Great Plains is an attractive clothbound book that comes in a colored dust j...
This work presents a body of edited ethnographic field notes on the Comanches, the majority of it fr...
This volume reports the results of studies on skeletal remains throughout the Great Plains from earl...
This volume, edited by Stanley A. Ahler and Marvin Kay, consists of19 contributions by 21 authors. I...
Despite the relatively long legacy of professional archaeological research in the northern Great Pla...
This book is an outgrowth of a symposium presented at the 2005 Society for American Archaeology annu...
Plains archaeologists have long awaited a worthy successor to Waldo Wedel\u27s magisterial Prehistor...
First paragraph: The editors and contributors to this large, impressive volume present thirty-two ch...
For a little over 75 years, Colorado has played host to important discoveries regarding the peopling...
Douglas Bamforth and his colleagues demonstrate in this edited volume the valuable role in modern ar...
This volume emerged from the 1992 symposium Geoarchaeological Research in the Great Plains: A Histo...
In 1962 Lewis Binford (American Antiquity, 28 [2]:217-25) classified archaeological objects into tec...
With his latest book Meadows has made a significant contribution to our understanding of Native Amer...
Archaeology is often described as detective work. In this detailed exploration of the High Plains of...
Theodore Binnema\u27s engaging ethnohistorical account of the peoples who once lived upon the Northw...
Mammals of the Northern Great Plains is an attractive clothbound book that comes in a colored dust j...
This work presents a body of edited ethnographic field notes on the Comanches, the majority of it fr...
This volume reports the results of studies on skeletal remains throughout the Great Plains from earl...
This volume, edited by Stanley A. Ahler and Marvin Kay, consists of19 contributions by 21 authors. I...
Despite the relatively long legacy of professional archaeological research in the northern Great Pla...
This book is an outgrowth of a symposium presented at the 2005 Society for American Archaeology annu...
Plains archaeologists have long awaited a worthy successor to Waldo Wedel\u27s magisterial Prehistor...