Publication Cover
KIVA
Journal of Southwestern Anthropology and History
Volume 46, 1981 - Issue 3
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Original Articles

Prehistoric Environment, Subsistence, and Land Use in Dead Valley, East-Central Arizona

Pages 143-153 | Published online: 26 Jul 2016

REFERENCES

  • Bayham, Frank E. 1980 Animal exploitation and seasonality: Inferences from the faunal data. In Prehistory in Dead Valley, east-central Arizona: The TG&E Springerville Project, edited by David E. Doyel and Sharon S. Debowski, pp. 389–399. Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series 144. Tucson.
  • Beeson, William J. 1966 Archaeological survey near St. Johns, Arizona: A methodological study. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Arizona, Tucson.
  • Bradfield, Maitland 1971 The changing pattern of Hopi agriculture. Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Occasional Paper 30. London.
  • Danson, Edward Bridge 1957 An archaeological survey of west central New Mexico and east central Arizona. Papers of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University 44(1). Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  • Dean, Jeffrey S., and William J. Robinson 1977 Dendroclimatic variability in the American Southwest, A.D. 680 to 1970. Laboratory of Tree-Ring Research, University of Arizona, Tucson.
  • Doyel, David E. 1978 Stylistic and petrographic variability in Pueblo II period Cibola white ware from the upper Little Colorado. Paper presented at the Cibola Whiteware Ceramics Conference, Museum of Northern Arizona, Flagstaff.
  • Doyel, David E., and Sharon S. Debowski (editors) 1980 Prehistory in Dead Valley, east-central Arizona: The TG&E Springerville Project. Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series 144. Tucson.
  • Hack, John T. 1942 The changing physical environment of the Hopi Indians of Arizona. Papers of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, Harvard University 35(1). Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  • Kelso, Gerald K. 1980 Palynology and human paleoecotogy in Dead Valley. In Prehistory in Dead Valley, east-central Arizona: The TG&E Springerville Project, edited by David E. Doyel and Sharon S. Debowski, pp. 349–370. Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series 144. Tucson.
  • Longacre, William A. 1964 A synthesis of upper Little Colorado prehistory, eastern Arizona. Fieldiana: Anthropology 55: 201–216. Chicago.
  • Minnis, Paul E. 1980 Prehistoric puebloan food and fuel: The macroplant evidence from Dead Valley, Arizona. In Prehistory in Dead Valley, east-central Arizona: The TG&E Springerville Project, edited by David E. Doyel and Sharon S. Debowski, pp. 371–387. Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series 144. Tucson.
  • Plog, Fred 1974 The study of prehistoric change. Academic Press, New York.
  • Plog, Fred, and Cheryl Garrett 1972 Explaining variability in prehistoric water control systems. In Contemporary archaeology: A guide to theory and contributions, edited by Mark P. Leone, pp. 280–289. Southern Illinois University Press, Carbondale.
  • Reichardt, Karen, and Gary Nabhan 1980 Ecology and ethnobotany of Dead Valley. In Prehistory in Dead Valley, east-central Arizona: The TG&E Springerville Project, edited by David E. Doyel and Sharon S. Debowski, pp. 19–33. Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series 144. Tucson.
  • Rugge, Dale 1980 Geophysical characteristics and resources of Dead Valley. In Prehistory in Dead Valley, east-central Arizona: The TG&E Springerville Project, edited by David E. Doyel and Sharon S. Debowski, pp. 35–41. Arizona State Museum Archaeological Series 144. Tucson.
  • Sellers, William D., and Richard H. Hill (editors) 1974 Arizona climate, 1931–1972. (Revised, 2nd edition.) University of Arizona Press, Tucson.

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