Recent excavations at large Early Agricultural Period village sites in Tucson, Arizona have greatly increased archaeological knowledge about the introduction of agriculture into the U.S. Southwest. The sites of Los Pozos (AZ AA:12:91 [ASM]), Las Capas (AZ AA:12:111 [ASM]), and AZ AA:12:92 (ASM) yielded very large faunal assemblages dating to the Middle Archaic, San Pedro, Early Cienega, and Late Cienega phases, spanning the introduction of Mesoamerican domesticates. This dissertation compares the fauna from these sites to a large database of published faunal material from sites dating to the Middle Archaic through Classic Hohokam periods in southern Arizona. Faunal assemblages provide an important body of data on the social and economic cha...
This study proposes that the transition to agriculture in the North American Southwest caused change...
People have long argued about the origins of agriculture in the northern U.S. Southwest. While the r...
Previous zooarchaeological studies in the Southwest indicate that over time, larger animal resources...
This study investigates the transition from hunting and gathering economies to mixed economies invol...
Hunting by horticulturalists in the Southwest examines the impact of horticulture on hunting behavio...
High ubiquities of maize, coupled with other evidence of extended occupations at large Early Agricul...
The Early Agricultural period (EAP) has been a central focus of study in the American Southwest and ...
The prehistoric dispersal of domesticated plants among hunter-gatherer societies is a poorly underst...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2001Many archaeologists have argued that reductions in th...
This dissertation considers animal remains from great houses in the San Juan Basin of the American S...
The interplay between social and productive spheres in arid land agrarian societies with non-mechani...
Archaeologists concerned w th human adaptations in the American Southwest have generally assumed tha...
A model for differential land use during the Archaic (8500-1700 B.C.) and Early Agricultural (1700 B...
The Classic period farmers living in the Tonto Basin, Arizona faced a diverse and rapidly fluctuatin...
The Early Agricultural period (2100 B.C. –A.D. 200) is characterized by the introduction of cultigen...
This study proposes that the transition to agriculture in the North American Southwest caused change...
People have long argued about the origins of agriculture in the northern U.S. Southwest. While the r...
Previous zooarchaeological studies in the Southwest indicate that over time, larger animal resources...
This study investigates the transition from hunting and gathering economies to mixed economies invol...
Hunting by horticulturalists in the Southwest examines the impact of horticulture on hunting behavio...
High ubiquities of maize, coupled with other evidence of extended occupations at large Early Agricul...
The Early Agricultural period (EAP) has been a central focus of study in the American Southwest and ...
The prehistoric dispersal of domesticated plants among hunter-gatherer societies is a poorly underst...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 2001Many archaeologists have argued that reductions in th...
This dissertation considers animal remains from great houses in the San Juan Basin of the American S...
The interplay between social and productive spheres in arid land agrarian societies with non-mechani...
Archaeologists concerned w th human adaptations in the American Southwest have generally assumed tha...
A model for differential land use during the Archaic (8500-1700 B.C.) and Early Agricultural (1700 B...
The Classic period farmers living in the Tonto Basin, Arizona faced a diverse and rapidly fluctuatin...
The Early Agricultural period (2100 B.C. –A.D. 200) is characterized by the introduction of cultigen...
This study proposes that the transition to agriculture in the North American Southwest caused change...
People have long argued about the origins of agriculture in the northern U.S. Southwest. While the r...
Previous zooarchaeological studies in the Southwest indicate that over time, larger animal resources...