Archaeological Landscapes on the High Plains
收藏DataONE2012-05-08 更新2024-06-27 收录
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https://search.dataone.org/view/doi:10.6067:XCV81C1W2T_meta$v=1336450210417
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Focusing on long-term change, this book considers ethnographic literature, archaeological evidence, and environmental data spanning thousands of years of human presence to understand human perception and construction of landscape. The contributors offer cohesive and synthetic studies emphasizing hunter-gatherers and subsistence farmers. Using landscape as both reality and metaphor, Archaeological Landscapes on the High Plains explores the different and changing ways that people interacted with place in this transitional zone between the Rocky Mountains and the eastern prairies. The contemporary archaeologists working in this small area have chosen diverse approaches to understand the past and its relationship to the present. Through these ten case studies, this variety is highlighted but leads to a common theme - that the High Plains contains important locales to which people, over generations or millennia, return. Providing both data and theory on a region that has not previously received much attention from archaeologists, especially compared with other regions in North America, this volume is a welcome addition to the literature. Contributors include: Paul Burnett, Oskar Burger, Minette C. Church, Bonnie J. Clark, Philip Duke, Kevin Gilmore, Eileen Johnson, Mark D. Mitchell, Michael R. Peterson, Laura L. Scheiber, and Lawrence C. Todd. The cover, title page, table of contents, and first chapter entitled "A Sloping Land: An Introduction to Archaeological Landscapes on the High Plains" by Bonnie J. Clark and Laura L. Scheiber is available here. The book in its entirety (296 pages) is available from University Press of Colorado.
创建时间:
2012-05-08



