Table of Contents:
List of Figures
List of Tables
Preface
Part 1: Introduction
1. Setting the Stage: A Reconsideration of Salmon, Aztec, and the Middle San Juan Region in Chacoan and Post-Chacoan Puebloan History
Part 2: Salmon Pueblo
2. Salmon Ruins: Architecture and Development of a Chacoan Satellite on the San Juan River
3. Salmon Pueblo as a Ritual and Residential Chacoan Great House
Part 3: Material Culture Analyses: Salmon Pueblo
4. Subsistence and Plant Use During the Chacoan and Secondary Occupations at Salmon Ruins
5. Parasite Pathoecology of Salmon Pueblo and Other Chacoan Great Houses: The Healthiest and Wormiest Ancestral Puebloans
6. Animal Bone from Salmon Ruins and Other Great Houses: Faunal Exploitation in the Chaco World
7. Sighting Along the Grain: Differential Structural Wood Use at the Salmon Ruin
8. Human Remains Recovered from the Tower Kiva Salmon Ruins
Part 4: Material Culture Analyses: Across the Middle San Juan
9. An Initial Assessment of Perishable Relationships Among Salmon, Aztec, and Chaco Canyon
10. Ceramics of the Middle San Juan Region: Potters, Recipes, and Varieties
Part 5: New Research in the Middle San Juan Region
11. Puebloan Communities on the South Side of the Middle San Juan River
12. Animas Anamnesis: Aztec Ruins or Anasazi Capital?
13. Comparing Great House Architecture: Perspectives from the Bluff Great House
Part 6: Synthetic Views of the Middle San Juan Region
14. Chacoan Society: The View from Salmon Ruins
15. The Position of Salmon Ruins in the Middle San Juan, AD 1000–1300: A Perspective from Ceramic Design Structure
16. The La Plata, the Totah, and the Chaco: Variations on a Theme
17. Sacred Landscapes: The Chaco-Totah Connection
Part 7: From the Outside: Salmon and the Middle San Juan Region in a Larger Context
18. Population Dynamics among Salmon's Northern Neighbors
19. The Middle San Juan and Chaco Canyon
Part 8: Conclusion
20. Prodigy, Rebel, or Stepchild? The Middle San Juan Region vis-à-vis Chaco Canyon
References
Contributors
Index