Contents
Illustrations
Contributors
Acknowledgments
1: Changing Histories, Landscapes, and Perspectives
Part 1: Past and Present Issues
2: Ten Millennia, Twenty Years Later
3: Foraging Societies in an Arid Environment
4: Moving on the Landscape
5: Rethinking Social Power and Inequality in the Aboriginal Southwest/Northwest
6: Demographic Issues of the Protohistoric Period
7: Remembering Archaeology’s Past
Part 2: Landscape Use and Ecological Change
8: Landscape Change
9: Anthropogenic Ecology in the American Southwest
10: Soil and Landscape Responses to American Indian Agriculture in the Southwest
11: Investigating the Consequences of Long-Term Human Predation of R-Selected Species
12: Human Impacts on Animal Populations in the American Southwest
13: Legacies on the Landscape
14: Linking the Past with the Present
Part 3: Movement and Ethnogenesis
15: A Framework for Controlled Comparisons of Ancient Southwestern Movement
16: Becoming Hopi, Becoming Tiwa
17: Standing Out Versus Blending In
18: Ancestral Pueblo Migrations in the Southern Southwest
19: Ensouled Places
20: Themes and Models for Understanding Migration in the Southwest
Part 4: Connectivity and Scale
21: Connectivity and Scale in the Greater American Southwest
22: Irrigation Communities and Communities in Diaspora
23: Anchoring Identities
24: Ritual Places and Pilgrimages
25: The Past Is Now
26: Historiography and Archaeological Theory at Bigger Scales
27: Connectivity, Landscape, and Scale
Index