My research examines the articulation between spatial and social order in the late Prehispanic Pueblo Southwest. The thirteenth and fourteenth centuries in the Four Corners region of the Southwest United States were characterized by substantial migration and the increasing aggregation of populations into large villages clustered across the landscape. These new social arrangements brought previously independent and often diverse groups into close proximity through their occupation of contiguous architectural structures. My dissertation seeks to understand how groups utilized, interacted with, and related to their new spatial settings through an examination of the three largest villages of the Homol’ovi Settlement Cluster, a group of ancestra...
Space Syntax theory (Hillier 1996; Hillier and Hanson 1984) postulates that the configurations of sp...
The use of intramural space is examined in and between structures from the Hohokam site of Snaketown...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Anthropology, University of New MexicoThis study examines the spatial organization o...
This dissertation develops a new archaeological approach for analysing social interaction through th...
Deposition creates the archaeological record; however, the social implications of depositional pract...
Architecture can be an enigmatic class of material culture to understand archaeologically and a sing...
This research explores the relationship between social identity, artifact style, and communities of ...
This research seeks to redirect the present approaches to population aggregation, particularly the s...
From A.D. 860 to 1130, ancestral Puebloan peoples constructed more than a dozen multi-storey structu...
This study analyzes the vernacular architecture of ancestral Pueblo kivas dating from the Pueblo II ...
The Pueblo household in the American Southwest is examined at Hopi and Zuni and at the prehistoric p...
Built form, or human spatial organization, has usually been studied in cultural anthropology and arc...
Includes bibliographical references and index.New research on human organization in the American Sou...
This dissertation investigates how people in the northern US Southwest used clothing and representat...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of Anthropology, Washington State UniversityDespite decades of Chaco-styl...
Space Syntax theory (Hillier 1996; Hillier and Hanson 1984) postulates that the configurations of sp...
The use of intramural space is examined in and between structures from the Hohokam site of Snaketown...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Anthropology, University of New MexicoThis study examines the spatial organization o...
This dissertation develops a new archaeological approach for analysing social interaction through th...
Deposition creates the archaeological record; however, the social implications of depositional pract...
Architecture can be an enigmatic class of material culture to understand archaeologically and a sing...
This research explores the relationship between social identity, artifact style, and communities of ...
This research seeks to redirect the present approaches to population aggregation, particularly the s...
From A.D. 860 to 1130, ancestral Puebloan peoples constructed more than a dozen multi-storey structu...
This study analyzes the vernacular architecture of ancestral Pueblo kivas dating from the Pueblo II ...
The Pueblo household in the American Southwest is examined at Hopi and Zuni and at the prehistoric p...
Built form, or human spatial organization, has usually been studied in cultural anthropology and arc...
Includes bibliographical references and index.New research on human organization in the American Sou...
This dissertation investigates how people in the northern US Southwest used clothing and representat...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of Anthropology, Washington State UniversityDespite decades of Chaco-styl...
Space Syntax theory (Hillier 1996; Hillier and Hanson 1984) postulates that the configurations of sp...
The use of intramural space is examined in and between structures from the Hohokam site of Snaketown...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Anthropology, University of New MexicoThis study examines the spatial organization o...