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"Northern Mexico is part of the larger Southwest and an under-published area of archaeology/anthropology, generally referred to as borderlands. This volume focuses on the use of historical texts, oral histories, and ethnographic observation as data sources used in archaeological interpretation, in addition to material remains. The manuscript was organized along geographical lines-Puebloan World, Sierra Madre, and Sonoran Desert-to emphasize the differences between archaeologists in their use of data and interpretation of results. There are two principle themes in the volume: "how far back do identities persist; and who was connected to who?""--…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Northern Mexico is part of the larger Southwest and an under-published area of archaeology/anthropology, generally referred to as borderlands. This volume focuses on the use of historical texts, oral histories, and ethnographic observation as data sources used in archaeological interpretation, in addition to material remains. The manuscript was organized along geographical lines-Puebloan World, Sierra Madre, and Sonoran Desert-to emphasize the differences between archaeologists in their use of data and interpretation of results. There are two principle themes in the volume: "how far back do identities persist; and who was connected to who?""--
Autorenporträt
John Philip Carpenter is research professor at the Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia--Centro INAH Hermosillo, Sonora. His research includes archaeology and enthnohistory projects in Arizona, California, Oregon, New Mexico, Texas, and Utah, as well as Chiapas, Chihuahua, Sinaloa, Sonora, and Zacatecas, Mexico. Matthew Pailes is assistant professor of anthropology at the University of Oklahoma. He is currently collaborating with John Carpenter and Guadalupe Sánchez on long-term research in the Sierra Madre Occidental to compare material culture from multiple valleys to reconstruct the demographic and political history of the region.