Canadiana

Canadiana
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1158
Release: 1985
Genre: Canada
ISBN:

Archaeology in Latin America

Archaeology in Latin America
Author: Benjamin Alberti
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 313
Release: 2005-08-16
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1134597843

The first overview of current themes in Latin American archaeology written solely by archaeologists native to the region, making their collected expertise available to an English-speaking audience for the first time.

Reinterpreting Prehistory of Central America

Reinterpreting Prehistory of Central America
Author: Mark Miller Graham
Publisher:
Total Pages: 360
Release: 1993
Genre: History
ISBN:

Reinterpreting Prehistory of Central America provides reassessments of the paradigms that have guided - sometimes unconsciously and uncritically - interpretations of ancient Central American society, culture, and art. This volume challenges prevailing notions of Mesoamerica and other intellectual constructs of Central American prehistory, drawing on deconstruction, structuralism, diffusionism, and postprocessual archaeology. Nine chapters by distinguished art historians, anthropologists, and archaeologists from the United States, Costa Rica, and Panama illuminate diverse perspectives on common themes in Central American prehistory, such as the definition of center and periphery, the relation between ethnicity and polychrome ceramic traditions, the cultural meanings of color, and the social reality in mortuary art. A common focus among the authors is the relationship between the so-called high cultures, especially the Maya and their supposedly less-developed neighbors in southern Central America. This volume has more than 150 illustrations. The contributors include Mark Miller Graham, Terence Grieder, Rosemary Joyce, Oscar Fonseca Zamora, Peter S. Briggs, Mary W. Helms, Richard Cooke, Whitney Davis, and Frederick W. Lange.

Inter-regional Ties in Costa Rican Prehistory

Inter-regional Ties in Costa Rican Prehistory
Author: Esther Skirboll
Publisher: British Archaeological Reports Oxford Limited
Total Pages: 302
Release: 1984
Genre: History
ISBN:

Symposium in honor of Carl Vilhelm Hartman, held in Carnegie Museum's Section of Anthropology.

Cobble Circles and Standing Stones

Cobble Circles and Standing Stones
Author: Jeffrey Quilter
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Total Pages: 233
Release: 2004-04
Genre: History
ISBN: 1587294842

In this first-person tale of archaeological adventure in the tropical forest, Jeffrey Quilter tells the story of his excavation of Rivas, a great ceremonial center at the foot of the Talamanca Mountain range, which flourished between A.D. 900 and 1300, and its fabled gold-filled cemetery, the Panteón de La Reina. Beginning with the 1992 field season and ending with the last excavations in 1998, Quilter discusses Rivas’ builders and users, theories on chiefdom societies, and the daily interactions and surprises of modern archaeological fieldwork. Writing in the first person with a balance between informal language and academic theory, Quilter concludes that Rivas was a ceremonial center for mortuary rituals to bury chiefly elite on the Panteón. Through use of his narrative technique, he provides the reader with accounts of discoveries as they occurred in fieldwork and the development of interpretations to explain the ancient refuse and cobble architecture his team uncovered. As his story progresses amid the enchantment of the Costa Rican landscape, research plans are adjusted and sometimes completely overturned as new discoveries, often serendipitous ones, are made. Such changing circumstances lead to new insights into the rise and fall of the people who built the cobble circles and raised the standing stones at Rivas, a thousand years ago. The only book in English that focuses on a single archaeological site in Costa Rica, which continues to develop as a destination for archaeological tourism, Cobble Stones and Standing Circles will appeal to laypeople and professionals alike.