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13 Community Organization on the Edge of the Mesa Verde Region
Recent Investigations at Cowboy Wash Pueblo, Moqui Springs Pueblo, and Yucca House
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Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents vii
- Figures xi
- Tables xv
- 1 Forty Years of Integrating American Indian Knowledge, Public Education, and Archaeological Research in the Central Mesa Verde Region 3
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Part I History of the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center
- 2 The Early History of Crow Canyon’s Archaeology, Education, and American Indian Programs 15
- 3 From DAP Roots to Crow Canyon and VEP Shoots 26
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Part II Indigenous Archaeology
- 4 The Pueblo Farming Project 53
- 5 Place of the Songs 72
- 6 What the Old Ones Can Teach Us 83
- 7 The Knowledge Keepers 105
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Part III Archaeology and Public Education
- 8 Conceptualizing the Past 119
- 9 Making a Place for Archaeology in K–12 Education 132
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Part IV Community and Regional Studies
- 10 Community Development and Practice in the Basketmaker III Period 147
- 11 Bridging the Long Tenth Century 165
- 12 Community Centers 183
- 13 Community Organization on the Edge of the Mesa Verde Region 204
- 14 Formation and Composition of Communities 222
- 15 Lithic Analyses and Sociopolitical Organization 239
- 16 Leaving Town 256
- 17 Bi-Walls, Tri-Walls, and the Aztec Regional System 268
- 18 Revisiting the Depopulation of the Northern Southwest with Dendrochronology 282
- 19 Thirteenth-Century Villages and the Depopulation of the Northern San Juan Region by Pueblo Peoples 307
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Part V Human-Environment Relationship Research
- 20 The Exploitation of Rodents in the Mesa Verde Region 325
- 21 Fine-Grained Chronology Reveals Human Impacts on Animal Populations in the Mesa Verde Region of the American Southwestn 335
- 22 Forty Years of Archaeobotany at Crow Canyon and 850 Years of Plant Use in the Central Mesa Verde Region 347
- 23 “Old Pots Make Me Think New Thoughts” 359
- Index 367
- Contributors 377
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter i
- Contents vii
- Figures xi
- Tables xv
- 1 Forty Years of Integrating American Indian Knowledge, Public Education, and Archaeological Research in the Central Mesa Verde Region 3
-
Part I History of the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center
- 2 The Early History of Crow Canyon’s Archaeology, Education, and American Indian Programs 15
- 3 From DAP Roots to Crow Canyon and VEP Shoots 26
-
Part II Indigenous Archaeology
- 4 The Pueblo Farming Project 53
- 5 Place of the Songs 72
- 6 What the Old Ones Can Teach Us 83
- 7 The Knowledge Keepers 105
-
Part III Archaeology and Public Education
- 8 Conceptualizing the Past 119
- 9 Making a Place for Archaeology in K–12 Education 132
-
Part IV Community and Regional Studies
- 10 Community Development and Practice in the Basketmaker III Period 147
- 11 Bridging the Long Tenth Century 165
- 12 Community Centers 183
- 13 Community Organization on the Edge of the Mesa Verde Region 204
- 14 Formation and Composition of Communities 222
- 15 Lithic Analyses and Sociopolitical Organization 239
- 16 Leaving Town 256
- 17 Bi-Walls, Tri-Walls, and the Aztec Regional System 268
- 18 Revisiting the Depopulation of the Northern Southwest with Dendrochronology 282
- 19 Thirteenth-Century Villages and the Depopulation of the Northern San Juan Region by Pueblo Peoples 307
-
Part V Human-Environment Relationship Research
- 20 The Exploitation of Rodents in the Mesa Verde Region 325
- 21 Fine-Grained Chronology Reveals Human Impacts on Animal Populations in the Mesa Verde Region of the American Southwestn 335
- 22 Forty Years of Archaeobotany at Crow Canyon and 850 Years of Plant Use in the Central Mesa Verde Region 347
- 23 “Old Pots Make Me Think New Thoughts” 359
- Index 367
- Contributors 377