Volume 33 / Number 1

1991

Special Edition: Ethnoarchaeology

On The Cover: Kofyar mining for water at the height of the dry season in their Nigerian homeland. Photo by Glenn Davis Stone.

Vol. 33 / No. 1

By: Lewis R. Binford

A Corporate Caribou Hunt: Documenting the Archaeology of Past Lifeways

In seeking to understand the archaeological record, one of the most important conditioners of how well we infer a past […]

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Vol. 33 / No. 1

By: Lee Horne

Reading Village Plans: Architecture and Social Change in Northeastern Iran

Architecture plays multiple roles in people’s lives. Dwel­lings reflect not only how people live, but also how they think about […]

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Vol. 33 / No. 1

By: Warren R. DeBoer and John H. Blitz

Ceremonial Centers of the Chachi

It would seem that archaeologists are forever talking about cere­monial centers, places where people do not reside permanently but where they […]

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Vol. 33 / No. 1

By: Lee Horne

What is Ethnoarchaeology?: Introduction

In the traditional academic division of labor, ethno­graphers study the present, archaeologists study the past. Both aim to understand and […]

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Vol. 33 / No. 1

By: William A. Longacre, James M. Skibo and Miriam T. Stark

Ethnoarchaeology at the Top of the World: New Ceramic Studies Among the Kalinga of Luzon

I. History of the Project The Kalinga are a tribal society inhabiting the high mountains of Luzon in the northern […]

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Vol. 33 / No. 1

By: Glenn Davis Stone

Settlement Ethnoarchaeology: Changing Patterns Among the Kofyar of Nigeria

Archaeology consists of both reconstructing what  happened and explaining it happened. archaeological has always been conducted with an eye towards […]

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Vol. 33 / No. 1

By: Nan A. Rothschild

Incorporating the Outdoors as Living Space: Ethnoarchaeology at Zuni Pueblo, New Mexico

People’s houses both define and are defined by their lives. The material and permanence of houses are related to the […]

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