Archaeological studies of territory, tenure, and territoriality seek to understand how past claims and access to land and resources were expressed across landscapes and through time. The foci of such studies include the spatial and temporal patterning of settlements, dwellings, conspicuous burials, monumental constructions, rock art, defensive features, and resources. In line with this research, this dissertation integrates ethnohistoric and archaeological data in three case studies that investigate the roles of house forms, the distribution of local and nonlocal obsidian, and the positioning of defensive networks in communicating territorial and tenurial interests among the ancestral Coast Salish of southwestern British Columbia and northw...
Conference paper presented at the Society for American Archaeology Annual Meeting (April 6-10, 2016)...
This study explores the relationship between the Sts’ailes people and their cultural landscape in th...
In the mid-nineteenth century, an alliance of Coast Salish groups engaged in a maritime canoe battle...
This Dissertation weaves together interrelated ethnohistoric and archaeological evidence to provide ...
This study integrates settlement and community archaeology in investigating pre-colonial Stó:lō-Coas...
This dissertation examines multiple scales of Indigenous history on the Northwest Coast from the dis...
This thesis describes the aboriginal and contemporary social organization of the Coast Salish people...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of Anthropology, Washington State UniversityAt European contact, indigeno...
The research presented in this study is an archaeological exploration of the role of monumental rock...
The subject of hunter-gatherer territoriality is still a matter of some debate in the anthropologica...
The florescence of large, regional radiocarbon data sets allows archaeologists to examine fine-scale...
This study addresses the question of the nature of indigenous people's connection to the land, and ...
This study addresses anthropological debate about the role of corporate groups in the evolution and ...
The Coast Salish subsistence economy has been characterized by local fishing adaptations to regional...
This study investigates the prehistoric transition from egalitarian to ranked social structure at Ki...
Conference paper presented at the Society for American Archaeology Annual Meeting (April 6-10, 2016)...
This study explores the relationship between the Sts’ailes people and their cultural landscape in th...
In the mid-nineteenth century, an alliance of Coast Salish groups engaged in a maritime canoe battle...
This Dissertation weaves together interrelated ethnohistoric and archaeological evidence to provide ...
This study integrates settlement and community archaeology in investigating pre-colonial Stó:lō-Coas...
This dissertation examines multiple scales of Indigenous history on the Northwest Coast from the dis...
This thesis describes the aboriginal and contemporary social organization of the Coast Salish people...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Department of Anthropology, Washington State UniversityAt European contact, indigeno...
The research presented in this study is an archaeological exploration of the role of monumental rock...
The subject of hunter-gatherer territoriality is still a matter of some debate in the anthropologica...
The florescence of large, regional radiocarbon data sets allows archaeologists to examine fine-scale...
This study addresses the question of the nature of indigenous people's connection to the land, and ...
This study addresses anthropological debate about the role of corporate groups in the evolution and ...
The Coast Salish subsistence economy has been characterized by local fishing adaptations to regional...
This study investigates the prehistoric transition from egalitarian to ranked social structure at Ki...
Conference paper presented at the Society for American Archaeology Annual Meeting (April 6-10, 2016)...
This study explores the relationship between the Sts’ailes people and their cultural landscape in th...
In the mid-nineteenth century, an alliance of Coast Salish groups engaged in a maritime canoe battle...