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American Treasure and the Price Revolution in Spain, 1501–1650
Earl Jefferson Hamilton
Harvard University Press
Based upon years of study in Spanish archives, Professor Hamilton’s book attacks a problem not only of historical interest but of immediate economic importance. At a time when the relations between the gold supply and the price level are being anxiously watched, it is important to know how the price indices of commodities in general and of such groups as grains, building materials, fruits and nuts, poultry, animal products, forestry products, fish, and spices behaved under the impact of the greatest proportional increase in the stock of the precious metals in history. For the first time the Price Revolution, which vitally affected the economic life of Europe and was one of the most important factors in the decay of mediaeval economic institutions and the rise of modern capitalism, is studied in the country where it first appeared and presumably was most violent.
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Nine Mile Canyon
The Archaeological History of an American Treasure
Jerry D. Spangler
University of Utah Press, 2013
With an estimated 10,000 ancient rock art sites, Nine Mile Canyon has long captivated people the world over. The 45-mile-long canyon, dubbed the “World’s Longest Art Gallery,” hosts what is believed to be the largest concentration of rock art in North America. But rock art is only part of the amazing archaeological fabric that scholars have been struggling to explain for more than a century. Jerry D. Spangler takes the reader on a journey into Nine Mile Canyon through the eyes of the generations of archaeologists who have gone there only to leave bewildered by what it all means.

The early visitors in the 1890s were determined to recover collections for museums but never much cared to understand the people who left the artifacts. Then came a cadre of young scientists—the first to be trained specifically in archaeology—who found Nine Mile Canyon to be an intriguing laboratory that yielded more questions than answers. Scholars such as Noel Morss, Donald Scott, Julian Steward, John Gillin, and John Otis Brew all left their boot prints there.

Today, archaeological research is experiencing another renaissance—a new generation of university-trained archaeologists is determined to unravel the mystery of Nine Mile Canyon using scientific tools and techniques that were unavailable to past generations. Through the words and thoughts of the archaeologists, as well as the more than 150 photos, readers will come to see Nine Mile Canyon as an American treasure unlike any other. As the first book that is devoted exclusively to the archaeology of this unique place, Nine Mile Canyon will evoke fascination among scholars and the general public alike.

Winner of a Choice Outstanding Academic Title award.
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