Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_N - North America Archeology
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 102    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         North America Archeology:     more books (100)
  1. Bighorn Canyon archeology (Reprints in anthropology) by Wilfred M Husted, 1991
  2. Archeology of Mississippi by Calvin S. Brown, 1992-09
  3. Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene Paleoecology and Archeology of the Eastern Great Lakes Region: Proceedings of the Smith Symposium, Held at the B (Bulletin ... of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences) by Smith Symposium (1986 Buffalo Museum of Science), Norton G. Miller, et all 1988-10
  4. Arkansas Archeology in Review by Neal Trubowitz, 1982-06
  5. The Archeology Of Rock Art At The Narrows Rock Shelter, Crawford County, Arkansas (Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Report) by Jerry E. Hilliard, 2004-10
  6. The archeology and history of Cooper Lake, Texas by Eloise F Gadus, 1997
  7. Archeology of Grove Reservoir, Kansas 1969 (Anthropological series / Kansas State Historical Society) by John D Reynolds, 1987
  8. Archeology on the Shonto Plateau, Northeast Arizona (Technical series / Southwest Parks and Monuments Association) by Keith M Anderson, 1969
  9. Space and Time Perspective in Northern St. Johns Archeology, Florida (Southeastern Classics in Archaeology, Anthropology, and History) by JOHN M. GOGGIN, 1998-07-01
  10. River Basin Surveys. Papers by Joel Lewis Shiner, 1961
  11. Phase III archeological investigations at 14D081: Testing and excavation of a prehistoric campsite in northern Douglas County, Kansas (Contract archeology publication) by Christopher J Benison, 1996
  12. Montezuma Castle Archeology. Part 2: Textiles. Technical Series, Vol. 3, No. 2 by Kate Peck Kent, 1954
  13. Cultural resource investigations for the Lyons Ferry Fish Hatchery Project, near Lyons Ferry, Washington (Project report / Laboratory of Archeology and History, Washington State University) by Randall F Schalk, 1980
  14. Conceptions of Kentucky prehistory;: A case study in the history of archeology (Studies in anthropology) by Douglas Wright Schwartz, 1968

41. FLMNH - Historical Archaeology - Current Research Sites
a fleet of Spanish ships led by Pedro Menéndez de Aviles established the first permanent European settlement in north america at presentday St.
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/histarch/staugustine.htm
University of Florida Florida Museum of Natural History Historical Archaeology Historical Archaeology ...
version Espanol
St. Augustine: America's Ancient City Excavations Artifact Gallery Collections Further Reading Painting of a Casta (mixed blood) family in 18th The Boazio map of St. Augustine, made by an artist with Francis Drake's fleet just before Drake burned the town in 1586. Excavations underway in downtown St. Augustine Part of historic St. Augustine's living history museum, based largely on archaeological evidence. Excavations at the National Guard Armory headquarters, home of the first Franciscan monastery in the United States.

42. Archeology Anomalies By Subjects
M, archeology. Catalog of Anomalies (archeology Subjects). MAC CUSTOMS, GAMES. Similarity of Jewish and Zulu Customs; Asian Customs in Central and north america;
http://www.science-frontiers.com/cat-arch.htm
Science Frontiers
Catalog of Anomalies (Subjects) Strange reports * Bizarre biology * Anomalous archaeology
From New Scientist, Nature, Scientific American, etc Archaeology Astronomy Biology Geology Geophysics Mathematics Psychology Physics
Catalog of Anomalies (Subjects)
Other pages

M ARCHEOLOGY
Catalog of Anomalies (Archeology Subjects)
Within each of these fields, catalog sections that are already
in print are given alphanumerical labels. For example, BHB1 = B (Biology) + H (Humans) + B (Behavior) + 1 (first anomaly in Chapter BHB). Some anomalies and curiosities that are listed below have not yet been cataloged and published in catalog format. These do not
have the alphanumerical labels. MA ANTHROPOLOGY MAA PHYSICAL APPEARANCE
  • Polynesian Features Not Asian
  • Blond Eskimos
  • White Africans
  • White Indians in Panama (San Blas, Darien Tribes)
  • Welsh Indians
  • Mandan Origin
  • Red-Haired Nevada Indians
  • Redmen in Africa and Madagascar
  • Amerinds in China
  • White Indians in New Mexico and Northwest
  • Bearded Indians in Brazil
  • Semitic New Guineans
  • Ainu Origin
  • Yellow race in Africa
  • Living Neanderthals [BHE, Human-Neanderthal Hybrids]

43. Philosophical Society Of Washington Minutes Of Meeting 2097
We now have had ample opportunity to look at the archeology of Siberia to these oldest Clovis folks are in the southeastern part of north america Florida and
http://www.philsoc.org/1998Fall/2097minutes.html
Minutes of the 2097 th Meeting
Speaker: Dennis Stanford, Smithsonian Institution Topic: President Agger called the 2097 th meeting to order at 8:16 p.m. on December 11, 1998. The Recording Secretary read the minutes of the 2096 th meeting and they were approved. The speaker for the 2097 th However, putting things in context, the Clovis people were much more than mammoth hunters. They were forgers and did eat everything. As far as the mammoths go, any one group of Clovis people probably killed one mammoth in their lifetime, and then talked about it for the next 50 years. They certainly did not cause the extinction of the mammoth. Most such extinctions were caused by the fact that the species was already hanging on the edge. We now have had ample opportunity to look at the archeology of Siberia to look for evidence of ancestors of Clovis people. However, there really is not much evidence there of a direct Clovis predecessor. Further, radioactive dating of the original Clovis inhabitants in the Americas stops at 10,900 years old. Ironically, these oldest Clovis folks are in the southeastern part of North America Florida and Tennessee, not Siberia! But if Clovis did develop in the Southeast, who did Clovis develop from? When did it happen? And where did those people come from? If it wasn’t Siberia, where was it? To further complicate the story, characteristic Clovis technologies such as projectile points have recently been identified in Northern Europe. The consequent studies of the archaeological sites back in southern North America also show strong ties between the first Americans and the Upper Paleolithic of Europe.

44. Science, Social Sciences, Archaeology, Regional, North America: United States
Links to the Past archeology Information for Includes reports, the Native American Grave Protection north Carolina Archaeology - Articles and information
http://www.combose.com/Science/Social_Sciences/Archaeology/Regional/North_Americ
Top Science Social Sciences Archaeology ... Tennessee Related links of interest:

45. Archeology/Rock Art - Texas Parks And Wildlife
archeology/Rock Art Take a walking, guided tour to one of north america s oldest cave dwellings whose walls are covered with Pecos Riverstyle pictographs
http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/news/tpwcal/a_0004.htm
Archeology/Rock Art
Go to Main Calendar Page Archeology/Rock Art June - 2004 Fate Bell Cave Dwelling Tour - Every Wednesday through Sunday. Take a walking, guided tour to one of North America's oldest cave dwellings whose walls are covered with Pecos River-style pictographs, some 4,000 years old. 10-11:30 a.m. and 3-4:30 p.m.; fees $3 adults, $1 children 6-12; tours are subject to cancellation (432) 292-4464. [ Events at the Same Site Events in the Same Region June - 2004 White Shaman Tour - Every Saturday. Guided, two-hour hiking tour into the Pecos River canyon on the Galloway White Shaman Preserve to view the White Shaman. This pictograph, done in Pecos River style, has great detail. Tours are subject to cancellation. 12:30-2:30 p.m.; fees $10 per person, (888) 525-9907. (432) 292-4464. [ Events at the Same Site Events in the Same Region June 27 - 2004 Mission Tejas SP Archeology Tour - This half-mile hike will take you through three centuries of history associated with the first Christian church in what is now Texas. It will include stories of how Texas got its name, the little Caddoan girl, Angelina, Farmer Moore's contribution, the Civilian Conservation Corps involvement with the mission and park, and a visit to the sites of the Nabadache Indian village and the trace of the El Camino Real where it came through park. 10-11 a.m. (936) 687-2394. [ Events at the Same Site Events in the Same Region July - 2004 Hueco Tanks SHS Pictograph Tours - Every Wednesday through Sunday, by prior arrangement. See historic and prehistoric pictographs while walking among the unique rock formations of Hueco Tanks. Hear about and view the beautiful wildlife, plant life and history of this oasis in the desert. 9-11 a.m. and 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; reservations required, (915) 849-6684. (915) 857-1135. [

46. Archeology At A Glance
archeology is not the study of dinosaurs, or rocks, or fossilsarcheology is the study of past human cultures. People came to north america over an Arctic land
http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/expltx/eft/time/glance.htm
Texas Archeology at a Glance Prehistoric and Historic Sites Prairie Ecosystems Rolling Plains High Plains ... The Park Page: Facilities, Directions and more!
Did you know-
  • Archeology is not the study of dinosaurs, or rocks, or fossils-archeology is the study of past human cultures.
  • People came to North America over an Arctic land bridge across the Bering Strait, and they came to Texas thousands of years before Columbus arrived in the New World.
  • American Indians did not use the bow and arrow until about 1500 years ago-earlier hunters used spears.
  • Some stone points that people call arrowheads are really spear points.
  • The horse was introduced to American Indians by the Spaniards after A.D. 1500.
  • Bison (or American Buffalo) were hunted by American Indians afoot-long before the horse was introduced to the New World.
  • Changes in climate caused the extinction or many large mammals-such as a large bison (much larger than the bison of historic times) and mammoth-and this caused changes in the lifeways of prehistoric people for thousands of years.

47. Archeology Specialization - UBC
Anthropological archaeology, which focuses on the prehistory of north america, Mesoamerica and Japan is practised in the Laboratory of Archaeology which is
http://www.anso.ubc.ca/loa/arch_ugrad.htm
UNDERGRADUATE SPECIALIZATION IN
ANTHROPOLOGICAL ARCHAEOLOGY
IN THE DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY AND SOCIOLOGY, UBC
Areas of Archaeological Specialization
Facilities

Undergraduate Courses and Programme in Archaeology

Laboratory of Archaeology (LOA)
...
Moira Irvine Fund

Physical Anthropology
(site not yet available)
AREAS OF SPECIALIZATION AT UBC Regions:
  • Western North America Mesoamerica Eastern Asia
  • Topics:
  • Anthropolocial Archaeology Ethnoarchaeology Public Archaeology Studies of Adaptation Complex Societies Geoarchaeology Lithic Technology Bone Chemistry Quantitative Methods
  • FACILITIES
    • Museum of Anthropology Extensive British Columbia and Southwestern artifact collections Comparative faunal collections for Northwest America Graduate student office and lab space PC lab Fieldwork opportunities
    UNDERGRADUATE COURSES AND PROGRAMME IN ARCHAEOLOGY
    Our undergraduate courses offer general background for the non-major, as well as specialization for graduate work. Courses are either half-year (3 credit) or year-long (6 credit). Anthropological archaeology, which focuses on the prehistory of North America, Mesoamerica and Japan is practised in the Laboratory of Archaeology which is part of the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at the UBC. For a specialisation in archaeology, students must complete course requirements for a degree in anthropology, plus certain archaeology courses. Specialists in other branches of archaeology exist in the Classics Department (classical archaeology); in the Religious Studies Department (archaeology of the middle East); and in the History Department (historical archaeology).

    48. Center For American Archeology - Kampsville, Illinois
    of north america. Nationally and internationally renowned for its multidisciplinary approach to archeological research, the Center for american archeology
    http://www.greatriverroad.com/Cities/Kampsville/caa.htm
    Center for American Archeology
    Highway 100, PO Box 366
    Kampsville, Illinois 62053
    Phone:
    Open Seasonally
    April 26 - November 3, 2002
    Visitor's Hours
    Monday - Friday, 10 am - 5 pm
    Sunday, noon - 5 pm
    Free Admission - Donations Encouraged
    Kampsville and the surrounding area is in the heart of one of the world's most archeologically rich regions - the "Nile of North America." Nationally and internationally renowned for its multi-disciplinary approach to archeological research, the Center for American Archeology strives to unfold the unbroken record of nearly 10,000 years of cultural occupation through its professional research, publication series and public outreach initiatives.
    The Kamp Store Home of the CAA Visitors Center The historic Kamp Store, recently restored thanks to grant support, serves as home for the CAA Visitor's Center. Named to the National Register of Historic Places in 1994, the Kamp Store was a center of economic life along the rural river way. The Visitor’s Center displays exhibits and artifacts that document the prehistory of the lower Illinois River Valley. Complete listing of the CAA’s calendar of events Learn more about the Kampsville area.

    49. Archeology And Storytelling--Literature/Geography/World History Lesson Plan (gra
    archeology and Storytelling. Use our free online Teaching Tools to create custom worksheets story about longago visitors to a part of north america and found an
    http://school.discovery.com/lessonplans/programs/islandsofmystery/

    Grades K-5
    Grades 6-8 Grades 9-12
    Astronomy/Space
    ... Health History
    Ancient History
    U.S. History World History Life Science Animals Ecology Human Body The Microscopic World ... Weather
    For our newsletter and special teacher promotions.
    6-8 > Literature Grade level: 6-8 Subject: Literature Duration: Two class periods
    Objectives
    Materials Procedures Adaptations ... Credit
    Find a video description and discussion questions.
    Archeology and Storytelling

    Use our free online Teaching Tools to create custom worksheets, puzzles and quizzes on this topic!
    Students will understand the following: Both individual families and whole cultures learn about their pasts by collecting and analyzing stories and artifacts. Not all archaeological finds readily reveal their history to archeologists. You may want to ask students to bring family heirlooms to class (see Procedures). World map for reference as students tell family stories
    • How the family came to live in the United States How the family survived a war or a natural disaster How two ancestors met and fell in love How a long-ago relative did something amazing
    Islands of Mystery Back to Top Back to Top Discuss the value of oral history and local legends to archeological research. Why, in both investigations, did researchers put heavy emphasis on them? How reliable do you think they are?

    50. Ethnographic Arts Publications: NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN ART
    AN INTRODUCTION TO PAWNEE archeology. Bureau of american Ethnology, Bulletin No. THE INDIAN TRIBES OF north america. Bureau of american Ethnology, Bulletin No.
    http://www.tribalartbooks.com/cgi-bin/tab455/scan/mp=keywords/se=NORTH AMERICAN
    2619 matches found for NORTH AMERICAN INDIAN ART
    Matches 1-1000 of 2619
    Next

    AMERICA'S FASCINATING INDIAN HERITAGE, The First Americans: Their Customs, Art, History and How They Lived.
    AMERICAN ANTHROPOLOGIST, Vol. 38, No. 2, 1936. AMERICAN INDIAN ART MAGAZINE. ... [POSTCARDS] A group of 16 postcards (6" x 4") of Native American (Plains, Plateau, Southwest) in their traditional dress. Abel- Vidor, S., Brovarney, D., Billy, S. Aberle, S.d. THE PUEBLO INDIANS OF NEW MEXICO, Their Land, Economy and Civil Organization Adair, J. THE NAVAJO AND PUEBLO SILVERSMITHS. Adair, L.C. and others (eds). ARCHAEOLOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS AT PINSON MOUNDS STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL AREA: R.C. GORMAN. The Graphic Works. Adams, C. FRITZ SCHOLDER: Lithographs. Adams, E.C., K.A. Hays (eds). HOMOLOVI II: ARCHAEOLOGY OF AN ANACESTRAL HOPI VILLAGE, ARIZONA. THE MISSIONS OF NEW MEXICO, 1776. A Description by Fray Francisco Antanasio Domiguez, with Other Contemporary Documents. Adams, R.m. THE MISSOURI ARCHAEOLOGIST Adney, E. T., H.i. Chapelle. THE BARK CANOES AND SKIN BOATS OF NORTH AMERICA Aginsky, W.

    51. Ancient South America: Recent Evidence Supporting Edgar Cayce's Story Of Atlanti
    american Archaeology Problem north american Archaeologists versus Constributions to South american archeology Proof of and Myths of South america The Fringe
    http://edgarcayce.com/ancientsoam.html
    Ancient South America Recent Evidence Supporting
    Edgar Cayce's Story of Atlantis and Mu
    Gregory Little John Van Auken Lora Little
    Ancient South America is a genuine enigma. The continent is covered with ancient ruins, pyramids, and other archaeological sites, a host of which date to 50,000 years ago. Archaeological evidence shows that people lived in South America as early as 300,000 B.C., but the biases of North American archaeologists have hampered investigations and publicity of finds. In this third book in a popular series investigating Edgar Cayce's psychic visions of the ancient world, the authors show how archaeological evidence and recent genetic research from South America almost perfectly match Edgar Cayce's story of South America. In fact, genetic and other evidence strongly point to Atlantis and Mu (Lemuria) as the origin of many of the peoples of ancient South America. Both Atlantean and Lemurian DNA may well have been identified. In addition, the book shows how North American archaeologists, cloaked in the guise of "superior science," have actually maintained a set of pseudoscientific pronouncements and ideas for over 70 years all of which have been exposed as totally false since 1997. Despite the long dominance of North American archaeologists over media announcements and textbooks, many South American archaeologists have long asserted that a host of sites in the continent were occupied long before North America. Subjected to cruel and unrelenting ridicule by their North American counterparts, these scientists continued to conduct research showing how their findings were correct.

    52. AAA Traveler Magazine - Archeology Museums
    of north america.” Preserving many of the artifacts found in the region is the Center for american archeology in Kampsville, Ill., located north of Grafton.
    http://www.ouraaa.com/traveler/0205/dig_m.html
    Before You Go To plan your trip, stop by your nearest AAA service office for maps, TripTiks and TourBook guides. Or, go to our online Auto Travel section
    Dig The past
    Archeology museums, sites offer clues to ancient life
    Published: May/Jun 2002
    Participants learning how to excavate a site in Kampsville, Ill., during Archeology Day at the Center for American Archeology. /CAA photo Using shovels, picks and brushes, archeologists throughout the region are continually unearthing the stories of ancient Midwestern people written in the remains of their villages, monuments and artifacts.
    Preserved in archeological sites and museums in the region, these remains offer a window to the past, an understanding of what has happened here and how people have lived since the dawn of time. These sites help illuminate the murky and unwritten history of the region's early inhabitants dating back 10,000 years, from enormous Ice Age mastodons to highly sophisticated Native American civilizations.
    To glimpse the past, visit this small sampling of sites, some of which feature excavations in progress. Exhibitions of animal bones, a variety of artifacts, dioramas, mounds and re-creations of ancient villages help visitors explore the mysteries of ancient America.
    City of the Sun
    Just east of St. Louis, the remains of the most sophisticated native civilization north of Mexico are preserved at Cahokia Mounds State Historic Site. Because of its importance to our understanding of North American prehistory, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) designated the site a World Heritage Site in 1982.

    53. NORTH AMERICA
    north american Indians Films and Videos; South american Native american Biography; PreColumbian archeology; american Wisdom; Meso-america Arquitecture; Library of
    http://multiculture.usu.edu/organizations/nasc/links.htm

    NA
    TIVE POPULATION
    NATIVE AMERICAN INFO
    UNIVERSITIES IN USA
    ...
    NATIVE AMERICAN COLLEGES

    NATIVE AMERICANS IN UTAH:
    C ONTRIBUTIONS OF NATIVE AMERICANS: Avocado, Amaranth, Asphalt, Buffalo, Beaver pelt, Black Bear, Barbeque, Canoe, Corn, Caucus, Chocolate, Cocoa, Cassava, Chile, Cotton, Cashew, Chayote, Catfish, Cranberries, Democracy, Dyes, Ecology, Fertilizers, Food preservation, Gum, Guano, Hammock, Hickory nuts, Impeachment, Ipepac, Igloo, Jerky, Jerusalem artichoke, Kidney beans, Kayaks, Long pants, Llamas, Moccasins, Manioc, Medicines, Maple sugar, Names (half of the States names in USA as name of cities, Mountains, Rivers and others), Potatoes, Pumpkins, Popcorn, Pineapple, Pear Cactus, Pepper, Pomegranate, Passion fruit, Papaya, Paprika, Persimmons, Quinine, Quinoa, Rubber, Squash, Silver, Sisal, Sunflowers, Sweet potatoes, Sorghum molasses, Snowshoes, Turkey, Tapioca pudding, Tomatoes, Tortillas, Tobacco, Tamales, USA Constitution (Inspired by the Iroquois), Vanilla, Wild rice, Words (many of them), Xylophone, Yam, Zero, Zucchini.
    NORTH INDIAN WARS
    CENTRAL INDIAN WARS SOUTH INDIAN WARS CREDIT COUNSELING: National Foundation for Credit Counseling Your Debt Elimination Home Page Debt Consolidation Calculator The Center for Debt Management ... Consumer Credit Counseling Services ABOUT NEWS IN UTAH:

    54. Satellite Archeology Digs Out The Past
    This ongoing archeology from on high offers an enlightening high-tech flashback They represent a snapshot in the natural history of north america, two hundred
    http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/technology/lewis_clark_121223.html
    SEARCH:
    advertisement
    By Leonard David
    Senior Space Writer
    posted: 07:00 am ET
    23 December 2002
    The U.S. Congress made an Apollo-like decision nearly 200 years ago to dispatch an expedition of explorers into uncharted territory. Back then the financial bar to probe the unknown was a bit lower than the $25 billion needed to hurl human adventurers to the Moon. Two centuries ago, American President Thomas Jefferson sought a paltry $2,500 in funds. In 1803, Congress did allocate the money, footing the bill to send what Jefferson later tagged as the Corps of Discovery into territory west of the Mississippi River - beyond the western border of the United States. Images
    Adapted from Edgar S. Paxson 1912 artwork, "Lewis and Clark at Three Forks", by R.D."Gus" Frederick, 2002
    Landsat 5 and black and white historical aerial photo with Lewis and Clark trail line. Blend of images show changes in Missouri River near Desoto National Wildlife Refuge North of Omaha. CREDIT: GCS Research
    NASA Landsat 5, color infrared, and black and white historical aerial photo with Lewis and Clark trail overlay. CREDIT: GCS Research
    More Stories Looking at the Urban Impact on Earth From Space Amelia Earhart Plane Possibly Spotted By Satellite Satellites Capture Mt. Etna's Eruption

    55. XXXII. Non-English Writings II: Bibliography. Vol. 18. Later National Literature
    bulletins, and contributions to north american Ethnology. Peabody Museum of american archeology and Ethnology Archeological Institute of america american Series
    http://www.bartleby.com/228/0900.html
    Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Cambridge History Later National Literature, Part III Non-English Writings II ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
    The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
    Vol. 18. Later National Literature, Part III.

    56. A Concentration In Native American Studies
    Columbian, colonial and contemporary cultures of north, Central and South america. whose specialization concern the art, archeology, culture, geography
    http://departments.colgate.edu/nast/concentration.html
    Major Concentration Program
    The Native American Studies Concentration consists of nine courses.
  • SOAN 358 Native American Cultures, or HIST 358 Conquest and Colony: Cultural Encounters in the New World, are required for the concentration. An approved 400-level course or an approved 400-level independent study project. Of the remaining seven courses, at least one course must be taken in each of three different areas - North American (N), Mesoamerican (M), and South American (S).
    • ARTS 104 , Indigenous Arts of Africa, Oceana and North America (N) ARTS 247 , Traditional Arts of the Americas (N, M, S) ARTS 347 , Iroquois Art (N) ARTS 484 , Contemporary Issues in Native American Art (Seminar in Non-Western Art ) (N) CORE 164 , Ecuador (S) CORE 176 , North American Indians (N) CORE 177 , Peru (S) CORE 188 , The Iroquois (N) EDUC 311 , History of Native American Education (N) ENGL 204 , American Literatures: Native American Writers (N) ENGL 336 , Native American Literature (N)
  • 57. Archeology Division Homepage
    to an outstanding archeologist specializing in the archeology of the americas. The award has been given alternately to specialists in north america and Latin
    http://www.aaanet.org/ad/
    Archeology Division
    The Archeology Division of the American Anthropological Association was founded in 1983 to advance the study of archeology as an aspect of anthropology, to provide a forum for members to discuss issues central to the development of archeology, and to foster the publication and communication of the results of archeological research and interpretations to anthropologists, to other scholars, and to the general public. Members of the Archeology Division receive the AAA flagship journal, the American Anthropologist, and publications in the Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association series. Bylaws of the Archeology Division
    Responsibilities of Office

    Officers of the Archeology Division

    Membership in the Archeology Division
    Awards of the Archeology Division Archeology Division Distinguished Lecturer Gordon R. Willey Prize The Archeology Division also selects the recipient of the A. V. Kidder Award presented by the American Anthropological Association. Publications of the Archeology Division
    Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association

    Return to the Sections/Interest Groups Page

    Return to the AAA Homepage

    Membership Membership in the Archeology Division entitles you to

    58. North American Indians Historical Resources Subject Guide
    american educational resources, Native american history and archeology resources, Electronic texts of the United States; Indians of north america; The Cherokee
    http://slis.cua.edu/ihy/SP/JG.htm
    North American Indians
    Historical Resources Subject Guide
    Contents
  • INTRODUCTION LINK
  • STARTING POINTS LINK
  • COMPREHENSIVE RESOURCES LINK
  • INTRODUCTION
    This guide has been compiled with a particular emphasis on the history and cultural traditions of Native Americans in the United States prior to 1900. The sites selected represent some of the best native and non-native sites we found.
    Although this site should be of interest to anyone interested in learning more about Indians, our criteria for selection of sites included a target audience of secondary and undergraduate students researching Indians in the continental United States.
    We selected sites which would provide overviews as well as information on specific tribes and events in history. Our first priority for types of resources was sites where the information is available directly online; then online bibliographies and directories to indexes; and lists of sites where more information can be found. The selection criteria used was: subject relevance, authority, and currency (sites that appear to be updated regularly). In attempting to screen for authority, we placed an emphasis on resources found at sites maintained by educational institutions; local, state, and federal governments; historical associations; prominent internet document projects; and official tribal pages. The few personal pages we have included were cited and praised by several sources.
    This page was created by two Catholic University of America Library Science graduate students. They have graduated and will not be able to maintain this page. The page was last updated on April 23, 1996.

    59. Maryland Historical Trust Library: Serials
    News (Louisiana); Archaeology of Eastern north america*; Archeolog (Sussex Society of archeology and History); Architectural History;
    http://www.marylandhistoricaltrust.net/serials.html
    Maryland Department of Housing and Community Development
    Division of Historical and Cultural Programs

    The following journals and serials are contained within the Maryland Historical Trust's Library holdings [* indicates current subscriptions]:
  • Abstracts in Anthropology
  • Abstracts in Maryland Archeology*
  • Advisory Council on Historic Preservation - Monthly Reports
  • African American Archaeology
  • AIA Journal
  • Alert Diver
  • American Antiquity*
  • American Archaeology
  • American Indian Quarterly
  • American Journal of Archaeology
  • American Preservation
  • Annals of Carnegie Museum*
  • Anthro.Notes*
  • APT Bulletin*
  • APT Communique*
  • Archaeological Society of Delaware - papers
  • Archaeological Society of New Jersey Newsletter*
  • Archaeological Society of N.C. Newsletter*
  • Archaeological Society of Virginia Newsletter*
  • Archaeology*
  • Archaeology News (Louisiana)
  • Archaeology of Eastern North America*
  • Archeolog (Sussex Society of Archeology and History)
  • Architectural History
  • Archeological Assistance Program Technical Notes
  • Architectural Record
  • Archeological Society of Maryland - Newsletters of various chapters*
  • Arkansas Archeologist
  • Artifacts
  • ASM INK (Newsletter of the Archeological Society of Maryland, Inc.)*
  • 60. Wash Univ. Anthropology Faculty
    U New Mexico) Skeletal biology, paleopathology, paleodemography, forensic anthropology, mortuary site archeology; north america, Peru Charles Hildebolt (PhD
    http://www.artsci.wustl.edu/~anthro/anthfac2.html
    Anthropology Faculty, Staff and Associates
    Faculty
    Lois C Beck (Prof; Sociocultural)
    Political anthropology, history, tribe-state relations, Nomadic Pastoralism, Islam, Gender; Iran, the Middle East.

    John R Bowen
    Religion and ritual, Islam, social theory, kinship and social organization, historical studies, culture and political change; Sumatra, Indonesia, Europe.

    Pascal Boyer
    (Henry Luce Professor of Collective and Individual Memory; Sociocultural and Psychology)
    Cognitive processes, cultural transmission, cognitive development, evolutionary psychology, cross-cultural psychology, religion.

    David L Browman
    (Prof; Archaeology)
    North and Latin American archaeology; origins of agricultural economies; development of complex societies; pastoralism; historical archaeology.

    Margaret L Brown
    (Asst Prof; Sociocultural)
    Equality and Hierarchy, kinship and social organization, economic and political development, Madagascar, Indian Ocean.

    Robert L Canfield
    (Prof; Sociocultural)

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 102    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | Next 20

    free hit counter