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29th October 14:50
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Listeros,
Another busy month in Ancient Americas events, Mike Ruggeri October 31-November 1 Ohio Archaeological Council Fall 2009 Conference “New Approaches in Ohio Archaeology” Reese Center, Ohio State University Newark, Ohio http://www.ohioarchaeology.org/joomla/ November 1-7 Maya Field Workshops “The Art and History of Copan” Maya Field Workshops introduce you to the world of Maya archaeology and epigraphy in intensive, on-site seminars. Led by renowned archaeologist David Stuart of the University of Texas at Austin, we focus not on tours and traveling, but on a concentrated learning experience at a single place. In Fall 2009 we will be based in Copan, Honduras, where participants will take part in a unique, hands-on intellectual and cultural exploration of ancient Maya civilization. Over six days you will become immersed in Copan’s ancient history and culture. A key part of your experience will be the opportunity to learn about Copan’s court and community in its original, genuine setting. Each day we will visit the temples and major architecture of Copan, reading and decoding their monuments and inscriptions. We will explore the reigns of its kings and dynasties over the course of several centuries, roughly between 400 and 850 A.D. We will combine this on-site experience with daily lectures and workshops, so participants can work directly and actively with daily lectures and workshops, so participants can work directly and actively with Copan’s history, art and archaeology. The leader of our workshops is David Stuart, who has been a key player in the decipherment of Maya script since a young age. He has conducted research at Copan for over two decades, in collaboration with numerous colleagues, and is the co- author (with his father, George Stuart) of the recently published and critically acclaimed book Palenque: Eternal City of the Maya. Our week-long inaugural workshop in the Spring of 2009 focused on Palenque, México, one of the most fascinating and beautiful of all ancient Maya cities. In future years we foresee field workshops rotating between important Maya sites such as Palenque, Mexico, Copan, Honduras, and Tikal, Guatemala. To ensure a high-quality experience for all, participation in the Maya Field Workshop is limited. so please contact us as soon as you decide to join us, at. Our Spring 2009 Workshop filled up early, so we encourage you to contact us directly at mayafieldworkshops@gmail.com http://www.mayafieldworkshops.com/Main.html November 3, 7:00 PM "The Famous Crystal River Site: 100 Years of Research, Speculation, and Intrigue in Coastal Citrus County" Richard W. Estabrook, Regional Director, Florida Public Archaeology Network, Central Regional Center Since C.B. Moore started his investigations at the site in 1903, the Crystal River site has been the subject of cutting-edge research, rampant speculation, and intrigue for the people who have worked at this site. Starting with a brief site overview, I will discuss the various site components, including the two temple mounds, the unique burial mound complex, and the famous (perhaps infamous) stelae. Several well-known Florida archaeologists - Ripley Bullen, Gordon Willey, Hale Smith, and Brent Weisman - have all contributed to the story of Crystal River. Yet, despite all this work, a definitive site monograph or even agreement of the site’s temporal assignment is still lacking. This presentation highlights some of the site’s most interesting mysteries and charts a path for future research. Flagler Room, Flagler College St. Augustine, Florida http://saaa.shutterfly.com/ Wednesday, November 04, 8:00 PM AIA Lecture "The Evolution of Early Dwellings: Continuity and Change in the Transition from Archaic Structures to Ancestral Puebloan Pithouses" Matt Schmader, Parks and Recreation Department of Albuquerque (Stone Lecture) The results of several large-scale excavation projects are presented in terms of one unifying feature—the dwelling. Excavated structures dating to the middle Archaic period in central New Mexico are over 5,000 years old. Examples of structures covering a time span from about 3000 BC to AD 250 are discussed, as are trends in architecture and related features such as hearths and storage pits. The Archaic structures form a distinctive set when compared to early puebloan pithouses dating from about AD 650 to AD 900. During that time period in the middle Rio Grande Valley, more formalized architecture of dwellings and features is found. The interior use of living spaces, the functions and activities of different types of structures, subsistence, and early puebloan material culture are discussed in detail. University of Albany, Humanities 354 Albany, New York http://www.archaeological.org/webinf...ciety_code=all November 4, 6:30 PM Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary Lecture “Cold Case Files: The Great Anasazi Mystery” Guest speaker: Richard D. Fisher Please join Pueblo Grande Museum Auxiliary and Richard Fisher as he presents his lecture, “Cold Case Files: The Great Anasazi Mystery”. What happened to the Chaco Canyon Anasazi is one of the last great archaeological enigmas and has confounded researchers for generations. Using “Cold Case Files” theory and methods to analyze new archaeological, scientific, ethnographic and historical evidence, I propose an original and unifying theory for the Chacoans and indeed all of the Anasazi. Richard Fisher is a graduate of the University of Arizona in Education and has over 100 national and international published articles in more than 10 languages on the subjects of the geography and cultures of canyons worldwide and is the world’s leading authority on Tarahumara ultra long distance running and competitive racing. Pueblo Grande Museum Phoenix, Arizona http://phoenix.gov/PUEBLO/edsummry.html#AUXNOV November 4-7 2009 Southeast Archaeology Conference 65TH ANNUAL MEETING Renaissance Riverview Hotel - Mobile, Alabama http://www.southeasternarchaeology.o.../seac2009.html Thursday, November 5, 2009 Dumbarton Oaks Lecture Ann Cyphers, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México "Bad-Year Economics and the San Lorenzo Olmec" For reservations and information email or call 202-339-6440 http://www.doaks.org/document/doaks_...2009_11_05.pdf November 5, 6:30 PM School for Advanced Research Lecture "Turquoise, Trumpets, and Tchamahias: The Wealth of Chaco Canyon" John Kantner (School for Advanced Research) The stunning monumental buildings in Chaco Canyon have yielded some of the most amazing turquoise, copper, and shell symbols of “wealth” ever found in the ancient American Southwest. But while we marvel at these treasures, what did they mean to the ancient Puebloan people who lived in the Chaco world? Dr. John Kantner discusses what we know about Chacoan notions of wealth and value, and how these concepts changed over time. The New Mexico History Museum Auditorium Santa Fe, New Mexico http://sarweb.org/index.php?membersh...e_john_kantner Saturday, November 7, 8:00 AM–5:00 PM San Diego Museum of Man “Rock Art 2009 34th Annual Rock Art Symposium” Registration opens at 8:00 a.m. Morning Session begins at 9:00 a.m. Otto Center Auditorium (San Diego Zoo) San Diego, California http://www.museumofman.org/documents/flyer_rock_art.pdf November 7, 1:00 PM "The Deep Structure of Non-Iconic Rock Art: Human Universals" Ekkehart Malotki Ekkehart Malotki is a professor emeritus of languages at Northern Arizona University where he taught German, Latin, and Hopi from 1977 until 2004. For more than twenty-five years, his work as an ethnolinguist focused on the preservation of Hopi language and culture. During the last twenty years, his passion for rock art has taken him to the Sahara, to the Paleolithic caves in France, to Italy, Scandinavia and Mexico, and twice to Australia. In addition, he has devoted much of his time to the photography and interpretation of the rock art of the American Southwest. Deer Valley Rock Art Center 3711 W. Deer Valley Road 2 miles south of Highway 101 and 2 miles west of I-17 Phoenix, Arizona http://dvrac.asu.edu/events/calendar November 7-8, 2009 The Mayer Center Annual Symposium "The Art of Teotihuacan and its Sphere of Influence" Organized by Margaret Young-Sánchez (Denver Art Museum) & Annabeth Headrick (University of Denver) Sponsored by the Mayer Center and the Denver Art Museum Warren Barbour (State Universtiy of New York at Buffalo) "Host Figurines and the Social Order of Teotihuacan: Soldiers, Traders, Diviners and Peasants" George Cowgill (Arizona State University, Tempe) "Nose Pendants: Signs of Rank and Office in the Political System of Teotihuacan?" Annabeth Headrick (University of Denver) "Mass Production in a Preindustrial Age: Individuality and Ideology in Teotihuacan's Censers" Charles C. Kolb (National Endowment for the Humanities) "Classic Teotihuacan Period Ceramic Production" James Langley (Canadian Society for Mesoamerican Studies) "A Distant Prospect of Teotihuacan" Matthew Robb (Saint Louis Museum of Art) "The Torch and the Shield: Architectural and Iconographic Continuities at the Palace of Quetzalpapalotl" Saburo Sugiyama (Aichi Prefectural University, Japan) "Cosmology, Militarism, and Polity Materialized at the Major Monuments in Teotihuacan" Karl Taube (University of California, San Diego) "Teotihuacan and the Ceramic Art of Escuintla, Guatemala: Iconography and Cosmology in Early Classic Mesoamerica" Email mayercenter@denverartmuseum.org or call 720.913.0156 to be put on the Mayer Center email / mailing list. Sharp Auditorium (Hamilton Building), Denver Art Museum Denver. Colorado http://mayercenter.denverartmuseum.org/symposia.htm November 9-14 14th European Maya Conference "Maya Political Relations and Strategies" Cracow, Poland Papers delivered at the symposium will focus on interactions between Maya sociopolitical entities through time and across landscapes. The analysis will cover epigraphic, iconographic, archaeological, ethnohistorical and linguistic evidence. Some of the issues expected to be touched upon include: - the political and cultural role of interactions and alliances for a particular political entity, - the character of political interrelations between centres, as well as their change and reorientation over time, - the cultural impact which some centres might have had on others, - the effect of war on political systems and relations, - studies on trade, communication networks and tribute, - analysis of the archaeological materials that provide evidence of interactions between some Maya political entities, - the role of these relations for the development of Maya culture in general. Keynote speakers will include: Charles Golden (Brandeis University) & Andrew Sherer (Baylor University), Elizabeth Graham (University College London), Nikolai Grube (University of Bonn), Bernard Hermes (Nakuum Archaeological Project, Guatemala), Wieslaw Koszkul (Jagellonian University Cracow), Simon Martin (University of Pennsylvania Museum), Robert Sharer & Loa Traxler (University of Pennsylvania Museum), Jaroslaw Zralka (Jagellonian University Cracow) CALL FOR PAPERS The Wayeb Conference Board invites the submission of abstracts concerning the conference topic. Papers will be selected from all subdisciplines of Maya Studies to cover the topic in all dimensions and from various perspectives. Presentations will be accepted in English and Spanish. Abstracts may not exceed 250 words. Contributions of authors who submit more than one abstract (including co-authored papers) will not be considered. Co-authorship needs to be indicated upon submission. Please submit in electronic format (Word attachment) in the following order: 1. Author's name and affiliation 2. Address, Phone Number and email address 3. Title of Paper 4. Abstract The abstracts will be forwarded without the author's particulars to an anonymous Review Committee that will be selected by the Wayeb Conference Board. Deadline for receipt of abstracts is May 31st, 2009 Please send your abstract to the following address: callforpapers@wayeb.org (Only abstracts sent to this address will be accepted. Do not send your abstract to the organisers!) MAYA HIEROGLYPHIC WORKSHOP The conference will be preceded by a three-day long hieroglyphic workshop. Beginners, Intermediate and Advanced workshops will be available. All groups will be taught and supervised by experienced tutors. Tuition will be available in English and Spanish. In the Beginners Group Polish language consultation will be provided. The workshop includes an introductory lecture by Simon Martin (University of Pennsylvania Museum). There will be separate registration available for both events. Wieslaw Koszkul and Dr. Jaroslaw Zralka at emc2009@wayeb.org http://www.wayeb.org/conferencesevents/emc_now.php Tuesday, November 10, 7:30 PM AIA-St. Louis Chapter "Cave Archaeology in the Maya Region" Professor Jaime Awe (Belize). Missouri History Museum, 5700 Lindell Blvd at DeBaliveiere, Forest Park St. Louis, Missouri http://users.stlcc.edu/mfuller/aia/ November 10, 3:00 PM El Paso Archaeological Society Lecture "Archaeology in the Underworld: The Ritual Caves of Mesoamerica" Caves have been used as ritual spaces in Mesoamerica from as early as 1200BC until today, but archaeologists have only begun to understand the function and meaning of caves within ancient Mesoamerican ritual practice and cosmology. This program discusses our current state of knowledge and illustrates some of the more interesting finds from caves in the last decade. El Paso Museum of Archaeology in the auditorium at 4301 Transmountain Rd. El Paso, Texas http://www.epas.com/newsletter.htm#A...f_Mesoamerica_ Thursday, Nov. 12, 7:00 pm Southwest Lecture “Archaeological Myths: New/Old Perspectives on Puebloan Migrations” Eric Blinman. Archaeological perspectives on the history of the Northern Southwest have been shaped by two interrelated beliefs that may not be true. The first is the archaeological belief that modern Pueblo peoples, as a whole, are descendant from the ancient population known as the Four Corners Anasazi. The second is the anthropological belief that the variety expressed in modern Pueblo culture (when we bother to think about it) is a consequence of the past 400 years of acculturation piled onto another 400 years of response to the climate crises of the 13th century. These two perspectives have had strong but almost subliminal roles in shaping our reconstructions of Southwestern culture history, and they may have led us astray. The "real" story of Puebloan history may be simpler than we think. Museum stays open until 6:45. Hibben 105 Maxwell Museum of Anthropology 1 University of New Mexico Albuquerque, New Mexico http://www.unm.edu/~maxwell/ November 12, 7:30 PM Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Lecture “Pulling Together the Past: An Introduction to the Pimu Catalina Island Archaeology Project” The presentation will introduce the history of Catalina both in terms of the people who lived there and the archaeological investigations that have occurred there since the late 1800s. The Pimu Catalina Island Archaeology Project will synthesize over 100 years of data collection as well as work with stakeholders who care for this island, such as the Gabrielino/Tongva community, the local island residents, and the Catalina Island Conservancy. The talk will discuss our goals and achievements during the first three years of work. Dr. Wendy Giddens Teeter, RPA has been the Curator of Archaeology for the Fowler Museum at UCLA since 1998 focusing on museum, educational, and cultural issues of North and Central America, especially within southern California and Belize. She received her Ph.D. from UCLA Anthropology in 2001. She has a research affiliation with the UCLA Cotsen Institute of Archaeology and teaches periodically through American Indian Studies on cultural resource protection issues. Irvine Ranch Water District 15600 Sand Canyon Avenue (between the I-5 and I-405, next to the Post Office) Irvine, California http://www.pcas.org/meetings.html November 13-15 New Mexico Archaeological Council 2009 Fall Conference "The Middle and Northern Rio Grande" Preliminary Event Thursday, Nov. 12, 7:00–9:00 P.M.. Public Presentation: “Archaeological Myths: New/Old Perspectives on Puebloan Migrations,” by Eric Blinman (Director, Office of Archaeological Studies, Santa Fe). Hibben 105, UNM main campus. Saturday, November 14 Saturday, November 14: Morning Session Symposium: "Twenty-First Century Perspectives on Pueblo Population Movements in the Northern Rio Grande" moderated by Kurt Anschuetz (Hibben 105) "Movements and Migrations: Pueblo III Developments in the Eastern San Juan Basin and Acoma-Laguna Areas" "Pueblo Agricultural Mobility after A.D. 1300: A Preliminary Framework" "Centrifugal and Centripedal Movement in the Prehispanic Tewa World" 10:00–10:20 "Landscapes of Change: Residential Movement and Community Networks in the Northern Rio Grande Pueblo World" 10:20–10:40 Speaker or Discussant (name, affiliation TBA) 1:30–3:45 "Symposium: Agriculture in the Middle Rio Grande Region" "Surface Runoff Diversion and Terrace Irrigation at Classic Period Agricultural Complexes on Albuquerque’s West Mesa within Petroglyph National Monument" "New Research on Classic Period Ancestral Pueblo Agricultural Sites on the West Mesa of Albuquerque" "Rock Alignments, Isolated Sherds, and Classic Period Settlement Dynamics: A Review of Evidence for Prehistoric Agricultural Use of Albuquerque’s West Mesa" "Down by the River: Recent Geoarchaeological Investigations at Alameda Pueblo" Saturday, November 14: Afternoon Session "Puebloan Prehistory: Research Themes in the Northern Rio Grande" "Timing, Duration, and Distribution: A Look at the Latest Archaic to Early Developmental Transition in the Northern Rio Grande" 9:00–1:00 Sunday (Nov. 15) Training Session (Optional) Half-day, hands-on training session on Rio Grande Glaze Ware, led by Hayward Franklin and using collections in the Hibben Center. Limited to 30 persons. Hibben Center University of New Mexico Albuquerque, New Mexico http://www.abqarchaeology.org/NMAC Fall 2009 Draft Aug 7 09.pdf November 14, 1:30 PM Pre-Columbian Society at the University Museum Lecture “Breaking Wind: the Trumpet and Conch Horn in Maya Iconography” John Burkhalter musical notation or didactic sources remain, it is unlikely that the music that once flourished in Mexico and Central America will ever be re-created. Although the music is unavailable, the significance of music and dance in ancient American life , can be explored through such musical instruments as whistles, flutes, rattles, and conch shell horns or trumpets, as well as through other objects that do not appear to be musically related but have important musical properties. Room 345 University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology 3260 South Street, Philadelphia, PA http://www.precolumbian.org/othermeetings.HTM Monday, November 16, 7:00 PM-9:00 PM Smithsonian Seminar “Machu Picchu—Terraces of Enlightenment” $27-$40 The great Inca citadel Machu Picchu sits high in the Peruvian Andes, having emerged from beneath the canopy of a rainforest after being hidden for nearly 400 years. Take a vicarious journey to an architectural and archeological wonder—a fortress that survived to become one of the world's greatest enigmas. Through the eyes of photographer Mike Torrey, who visited and photographed Machu Picchu during the June and December solstices, and writer Marie Arana, who lived as a child on the Peruvian coast, explore Machu Picchu's history and culture, its vegetation and wildlife, and what it reveals about the lives of the Inca. Learn how Machu Picchu's architecture incorporates both scientific and spiritual principles: for example, the way first rays of the sun—worshipped by the Incas as the god Inti— enter the Temple of the Sun and mark the arrival of the winter solstice. Arana is a writer at large for the Washington Post. Torrey is an architectural photographer. His book Stone Offerings: Machu Picchu's Terraces of Enlightenment (Lightpoint Press) is available for signing after the program. S. Dillon Ripley Center 1100 Jefferson Drive, SW Metro: Smithsonian Mall Exit (Blue/Orange) http://residentassociates.org/ticket...eNumber=218714 November 16, 7:30 PM Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society Lecture "Cerros de Trinceras & Warfare in Sonora, Mexico" Randall McGuire Duval Auditorium, University Medical Center, 1501 North Campbell Avenue (north of Speedway) Tucson, Arizona http://www.statemuseum.arizona.edu/aahs/lectures.shtml November 16, 6:00 PM Southwest Seminars Lecture "Paleo-Indian Environment of the Great Basin; The Bonneville Rockshelter" Dr. Ted Goebel, Center for the Study of the First Americans Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta Santa Fe, New Mexico http://southwestseminars.org/Southwe..._Sky_2009.html November 16, 7:30 PM Santa Fe Archaeology Society Lecture "Archaeology Between Mesoamerica and the Pueblo World" Tim Maxwell, Director Emeritus, OAS (505) 473-2880 Courtyard by Marriott, 3347 Cerrillos Rd, Santa Fe, New Mexico http://sfarchaeology.org/html/calendar.html Thursday, November 19, 1:15 PM British Museum Gallery Talk "Commerce, Trade and Exploration in Aztec Times” Our topic in 2010 will focus on new developments in the study of early Maya iconography and writing, focusing on the sites of Kaminaljuyu, Takalik Abaj, Izapa, San Bartolo and others. Room 1 British Museum London, England http://www.britishmuseum.org/whats_o...tec_times.aspx November 19-21 "Animal Symbolism in the Mesoamerican Codex Tradition" The aim of the symposium is to lead to high quality instructional sessions that integrate language arts, social studies and visual arts. The speakers, representing research institutions in the U.S. and Mexico, are experts on languages, archaeology and zoo-archaeology, and the art of the three best-known regions that produced books – commonly referred to as codices – prior to European contact. These areas were occupied by the Maya of Yucatan, the Mixtec speakers of southern Mexico, and the Aztecs, who lived on the site that is now Mexico City. The event is built around nine presentations addressing the meanings of animals in pre-Historic Mexico and the continuation of these cultural traditions beyond the conquest. The symposium is an opportunity for members of academia to collaborate with teachers so that the topic can be introduced in classrooms in New Mexico. Though attendance is free and open to the public, preregistration is required, as seating is limited. Latin American and Iberian Institute, 801 Yale NE, University of New Mexico Main Campus Albuquerque, New Mexico http://laii.unm.edu/animal-symbolism/registration/ November 20, 7:30 PM Maya Society of Minnesota Lecture "Performing Rulership during the Late Preclassic: Landscape, Themes, and Symbols from the Pacific Piedmont" This presentation will focus primarily on the site of Izapa, considering how space was structured through the erection of stela and altar monuments, and the implications of the highly narrative imagery found on these sculptures. I will focus in particular on the images that feature avian transformation, which referenced a ruler's ability to communicate with the supernatural realm. Discussion will also turn to other symbols featured on the monuments that further illustrate rulers' emphasis on their supernatural powers as a foundation for claims to political authority Julia Guernsey Drew Science 118 (south of Old Main), Hamline University St. Paul, Minnesota http://www.hamline.edu/mayasociety/M..._Fall_2009.htm Saturday, November 21, 10:00 AM–5:00 PM A Study Day at the British Museum "Moctezuma’s Feast" Explore the role of food and feasting in Aztec (Mexica) culture in this study day. Food offers a fascinating window into the world of the Aztecs PROGRAMME 10.00–10.15 Opening remarks Dr Rebecca Earle, Warwick University 10.15–11.00 "The origins of ‘Mexican’ food" Professor Jeffrey Pilcher, University of Minnesota 11.00–11.45 "Maize in Mesoamerican mythology" Professor Alfredo López Austin, UNAM 12.00–13.30 Lunch break – please make your own arrangements 13.30–14.15 "The view from the Metate: women and the Aztec world" Dr Camilla Townsend, Rutgers 14.15–15.00 "Aztec banqueting: objects and artefacts" Dr Colin McEwan, British Museum 15.00–15.30 Afternoon break 15.30–16.15 "The chocolate drink" Dr Rebecca Earle, Warwick University 16.15–17.00 "Mexican cuisine today" Patricia Quintana, Mexican chef and author 17.00–17.15 Concluding remarks Dr Rebecca Earle, Warwick University Please note that each presentation will last about twenty minutes, to allow ample opportunity to ask questions of the speaker, and for discussion. BP Lecture Theatre £28, concessions £18 British Museum London, England http://www.britishmuseum.org/pdf/Moctezumas feast programme FINAL.pdf November 21, 9:00 AM Maya Society of Minnesota Workshop "Stepping Back in Time: Middle Preclassic Ritual and Power at La Blanca" This workshop will present recent data from ongoing archaeological investigations at the Middle Preclassic site of La Blanca, Guatemala, which is located on the Pacific Coast of Guatemala. La Blanca flourished between 900-600 BC, and was the major regional power along the coast and piedmont. Upon its decline, sites such as Izapa rose to power within the same region. A quatrefoil-shaped altar found at La Blanca that anticipates images seen at Izapa, San Bartolo, Takalik Abaj, and other Late Preclassic sites, will form the basis of discussion and illustrate Middle Preclassic antecedents for ritual patterns and imagery better known from later periods Julia Guernsey Giddens Learning Center 6s (the Anthropology Lab), Hamline University(southeast corner of Hewitt and Snelling), St.Paul, Minnesota http://www.hamline.edu/mayasociety/M..._Fall_2009.htm November 28, 10:30 AM-5:00 PM Institute of Archaeology UCL, London South American Archaeology Seminar Everyone is welcome. Please reply to b.sillar@ucl.ac.uk if you wish to confirm your participation and order your lunch. A contribution of £5 towards the cost of coffee, tea, lunch & administration will be required on the day. 10.30 am Coffee 11.00 am Bill Sillar (UCL), Sara Lunt (English Heritage) and Rob Ixer (Good Provenance) Potential sources and implications of the choice of andesite temper within classic style Inka pottery from Cuzco, did they really have to work that hard? 11.40 a.m. Diura Thoden Van Velzen (Independent / UCL) Zudañez Archaeological Project, Bolivia: work in progress Lunch (12.30-1.30 p.m.) 1.30 p.m. William Brooks (U.S. Geological Survey) Mercury and Small-Scale Gold Mining in Ancient Perú 2.10 p.m. Mercedes Okumura (Cambridge University) Mid-late Holocene Brazilian shellmounds: diet and disease Tea (3.0-3.30 p.m.) 3.30 p.m. Carlos E. Rengifo (University of East Anglia) Tombs of Specialists at San Jose de Moro: the Construction of Social Identity during the First Millennium in the Jequetepeque Valley, Peru 4.10 p.m. Quetta Kaye (UCL) Evidence for inter-island transport of heirlooms: luminescence dating and petrographic analysis of ceramic inhaling bowls from Carriacou, West Indies. This event is Co-sponsored by: The Institute for the Study of the Americas & The Institute of Archaeology, UCL Institute of Archaeology UCL, 34 Gordon Square, London. Dr. Bill Sillar Institute of Archaeology, University College London, 31-34 Gordon Square, London WC1H 0PY ENGLAND Ph: (0)20 7679 1538 Fax: (0)20 7383 2572 November 30, 6:00 PM Southwest Seminars Lecture "Political Ecology of Casas Grandes, Chihuahua, Mexico" Dr. Paul Minns Hotel Santa Fe 1501 Paseo de Peralta Santa Fe, New Mexico http://southwestseminars.org/Southwe..._Sky_2009.html Mike Ruggeri's Ancient America Museum Exhibitions, Conferences and Lectures http://tinyurl.com/c9mlao |
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