A Study of ArcheologySouthern Illinois University at Carbondale, Center for Archaeological Investigations, 1983 - Social Science - 263 pages |
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Page 74
... bone predominated at the end , the bone tools were the same throughout the occupation . From first to last the tubes , whistles and gaming dies exhibit the same forms . The rings presumably were restricted to the Great Pueblo horizon ...
... bone predominated at the end , the bone tools were the same throughout the occupation . From first to last the tubes , whistles and gaming dies exhibit the same forms . The rings presumably were restricted to the Great Pueblo horizon ...
Page 85
... bone object as a hair - spreader or some rock as a whetstone.96 Nor is objectivity being served by a refusal to group ... bones of small fish . Are not these findings valuable for comparative purposes , and are they not valuable for ...
... bone object as a hair - spreader or some rock as a whetstone.96 Nor is objectivity being served by a refusal to group ... bones of small fish . Are not these findings valuable for comparative purposes , and are they not valuable for ...
Page 189
... bones appearing with young birds would indicate a spring hunt , a ceremonial object with goose bones in New Mexico would mean either a spring or late fall cere- mony , etc. Such seasonal data might also lead to hypotheses as to the ...
... bones appearing with young birds would indicate a spring hunt , a ceremonial object with goose bones in New Mexico would mean either a spring or late fall cere- mony , etc. Such seasonal data might also lead to hypotheses as to the ...
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Common terms and phrases
abstraction American Anthropologist American Antiquity American Archaeology Americanist archeology analysis Anasazi Ancient Aspect antiquarianism appear archeological data archeological materials artifacts association behavior Berkeley biological bone burial Carnegie Institution cave ceramic Chaco Canyon Chichen Itza chronological classification Coahuila complex concept of culture conjunctive approach construction cultural anthropology cultural context cultural picture cultural relationships culture traits descriptive detailed discipline empirical ethnography Ethnology evidence example excavation fact factors field Fort Ancient Culture Griffin historians historiography human hypothesis Ibid idea important indicate individual inferences interest interpretation investigation Kaminaljuyu Kidder Kluckhohn Maya McKern means method mounds Museum nature objects past actuality patterns pertinent peyotism phenomena pottery Prehistoric problems procedure provenience pueblo purpose reconstruction Room says Science seems sherds significance Sinagua Snaketown social Society Sociology specific specimens stratigraphic synthesis taxonomic technique tion trait lists typology Uaxactun United UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA Webb York