Volume 33 / Number 1
1991
Special Edition: Ethnoarchaeology
On The Cover: Kofyar mining for water at the height of the dry season in their Nigerian homeland. Photo by Glenn Davis Stone.
Vol. 33 / No. 1
By: Nan A. Rothschild
Incorporating the Outdoors as Living Space: Ethnoarchaeology at Zuni Pueblo, New Mexico
People’s houses both define and are defined by their lives. The material and permanence of houses are related to the […]
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Vol. 33 / No. 1
By: Glenn Davis Stone
Settlement Ethnoarchaeology: Changing Patterns Among the Kofyar of Nigeria
Archaeology consists of both reconstructing what happened and explaining it happened. archaeological has always been conducted with an eye towards […]
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By: William A. Longacre, James M. Skibo and Miriam T. Stark
Ethnoarchaeology at the Top of the World: New Ceramic Studies Among the Kalinga of Luzon
I. History of the Project The Kalinga are a tribal society inhabiting the high mountains of Luzon in the northern […]
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Vol. 33 / No. 1
By: Lee Horne
What is Ethnoarchaeology?: Introduction
In the traditional academic division of labor, ethnographers study the present, archaeologists study the past. Both aim to understand and […]
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By: Warren R. DeBoer and John H. Blitz
Ceremonial Centers of the Chachi
It would seem that archaeologists are forever talking about ceremonial centers, places where people do not reside permanently but where they […]
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By: Lee Horne
Reading Village Plans: Architecture and Social Change in Northeastern Iran
Architecture plays multiple roles in people’s lives. Dwellings reflect not only how people live, but also how they think about […]
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By: Lewis R. Binford
A Corporate Caribou Hunt: Documenting the Archaeology of Past Lifeways
In seeking to understand the archaeological record, one of the most important conditioners of how well we infer a past […]
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