Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
Introduction: Pushing Boundaries: Papers of the 16th Biennial Southwest Symposium | Stephen E. Nash and Erin L. Baxter
Part I: Bears Ears National Monument
1. Bears Ears National Monument: Advocating to Protect Heritage on a Landscape Scale | William H. Doelle, John Ruple, Willie Grayeyes, Octavius Seowtewa, Terry Knight, and Josh Ewing
Part II: Chronological “Big Data” and Pre-Columbian History in the US Southwest
2. Out of Sight but Not Out of Mind: Insights from a Deeply Buried Archaeological Record in West-Central New Mexico | Jill Onken
3. The Promise and Peril of Seductively Large Tree-Ring Date Distributions | Stephen E. Nash
4. Chronometric Data Synthesis and the Late Holocene Archaeological Record of Southern New Mexico and Western Trans-Pecos Texas | Myles R. Miller
5. Modeling Time from 2100 BC to AD 1450 in Central and Southern Arizona | James M. Vint and Michael W. Lindeman
6. An Introduction to Wiggle-Match Dating and an Examination of Its Potential Impact on Chronological Studies in the Southwest | Gregory Hodgins, Nicholas Kessler, Matthew Guebard, and Lucas Hoedl
7. Theory, Technique, and Performance: Time for Renewal in Southwestern Archaeomagnetic Dating | Eric Blinman and J. Royce Cox
Part III: A Return to Context: Advancing Collections-Based Research in the US Southwest
8. Pushing the Boundaries of Clothing Research: A Preliminary Look at Twined Sandals in Relation to Social Identities in the Chaco and Post-Chaco Eras | Benjamin A. Bellorado
9. Shelves to Knowledge: Museum Collections and Southwest Archaeology in the Twenty-First Century | Saul L. Hedquist, Leigh Anne Ellison, and Will G. Russell
10. Obsidian Use and Circulation in the Greater Reserve Area in the American Southwest: New Analysis of the Martin Collection at the Field Museum | Danielle J. Riebe, Gary M. Feinman, Stephen E. Nash, and Jeffrey R. Ferguson
11. Dating Early Pueblo I Villages in Southeastern Utah: Insights from Collections, Archives, and Fieldwork | James R. Allison
12. Using Old Collections to Gain New Insights on Totah Social Identity: Ornaments, Age, and Status at Aztec Ruin | Hannah V. Mattson
13. Secret Ingredients: Using Collections to Address Foodways and Their Social Dynamics | Sarah Oas
14. Reassessing a Century of Excavation Data and Faunal Remains from Chaco Canyon | Katelyn J. Bishop, Samantha G. Fladd, and Adam S. Watson
Part IV: Expanding Perspectives on Plains-Pueblo Interactions
15. Reach: Athapaskan Origins and Interactions in the American Southwest | B. Sunday Eiselt, John W. Ives, and J. Andrew Darling
16. Of Cotton Blankets and Bison Hides: Cuyamungue and Plains-Pueblo Exchange | Scott G. Ortman
17. The Rio Grande Origins of the Plains Biographic Tradition | Severin Fowles and Lindsay M. Montgomery
18. Social Mechanisms of Plains-Pueblo Economics: Analysis of Smoking Pipes at Pecos Pueblo | Kaitlyn E. Davis
19. The Xoum-Ma-No Pueblos: “Where They Come Often to Trade” | Deni J. Seymour
Index
About the Authors