front cover of Inconstant Companions
Inconstant Companions
Archaeology and North American Indian Oral Traditions
Ronald J. Mason
University of Alabama Press, 2008
One of the most significant theoretical issues in contemporary American archaeology—the role of oral tradition in scientific research.
 
Ronald J. Mason explores the tension between aboriginal oral traditions and the practice of archaeology in North America. That exploration is necessarily interdisciplinary and set in a global context. Indeed, the issues at stake are universal in the current era of intellectual "decolonization" and multiculturalism.
 
Unless committed to writing, even the most esteemed utterances are inevitably forgotten with the passing of generations, however much the succeeding ones try to reproduce what they think they had heard. Writing shares with archaeo-logical remains a greater, if unequal, durability. Through copious examples across academic and ethnographic spectra and over millennia, Mason examines the disparate functions of traditional "ways of knowing" in contrast to the paradigm of science and critical historiography.
  

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front cover of Late Pleistocene Geochronology and the Paleo-Indian Penetration into the Lower Michigan Peninsula
Late Pleistocene Geochronology and the Paleo-Indian Penetration into the Lower Michigan Peninsula
Ronald J. Mason
University of Michigan Press, 1958
Ronald J. Mason examines the prehistoric geochronology of the lower peninsula of Michigan and the presence of specific projectile points from various counties to assess the evidence for Paleoindian people in the region.
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front cover of Two Stratified Sites on the Door Peninsula of Wisconsin
Two Stratified Sites on the Door Peninsula of Wisconsin
Ronald J. Mason
University of Michigan Press, 1966
In 1960 and 1961, Ronald J. Mason and Carol Irwin Mason excavated two sites on the Door Peninsula in Wisconsin’s Door County. The Mero site and the Heins Creek site contained many artifacts, including pottery, chipped and ground stone, copper, and bone. Mason named the earliest component at the Mero site North Bay I and considered it a late phase of the Middle Woodland period, with clear links to Hopewell and Point Peninsula cultures.
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