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10 Kiowa-Tanoan Kin Terms and Ancestral Pueblo Social Organization

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Chapters in this book

  1. Front Matter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Figures ix
  4. Tables xiii
  5. 1 Engaged Archaeology Today 3
  6. Part I Research in the Service of Repatriation
  7. 2 Research in the Service of Repatriation in the Southwest 19
  8. 3 Modeling Cultural Interactions and Expanding Traditional Histories 29
  9. 4 Reassessing the Burial Assemblages of Nuvakwewtaqa, Chavez Pass, Arizona 51
  10. 5 Bioarchaeological Research Resulting from NAGPRA Compliance Efforts 77
  11. 6 Repatriation and the Evolution of Osteological Practice 90
  12. 7 Identity and Cultural Affinity in the Alameda-Stone Cemetery, Tucson, Arizona 102
  13. 8 Creating a Safe Space for Western Apache Repatriation 125
  14. 9 Why Does Repatriation Matter? 133
  15. Part II Research at the Intersection of Archaeology and Ethnology
  16. 10 Kiowa-Tanoan Kin Terms and Ancestral Pueblo Social Organization 141
  17. 11 Research at the Intersection of Archaeology and Ethnology 159
  18. 12 Archaeology as Ethnology (and Vice Versa) 178
  19. 13 Reviving the Direct Historical Approach on the Western Margins of the Southwest 200
  20. 14 Grand Ideas 226
  21. 15 Connecting with the Past through Hopi Ethnobotanical Collections 238
  22. 16 The Landscape of Navajo Identities 251
  23. Part III Scientific Approaches to Mesoamerican Connections
  24. 17 Experimental Replication and Technological Comparison of Turquoise Manufacturing Techniques in Mesoamerica, Northern Mexico, and the Southwestern United States 263
  25. 18 Archaeometric Analysis of Pre-Hispanic Turquoise Artifacts from Chalchihuites, Zacatecas, Mexico 282
  26. Index 309
  27. Contributors 323
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