HISTARCH Archives

HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY

HISTARCH@COMMUNITY.LSOFT.COM

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Anita Cohen-Williams <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
HISTORICAL ARCHAEOLOGY <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 17 Jan 1998 12:56:51 -0700
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (341 lines)
>X-Sender: [log in to unmask]
>X-Mailer: QUALCOMM Windows Eudora Pro Version 3.0.3 (32)
>Date: Sat, 17 Jan 1998 08:26:41 -0700
>To: [log in to unmask]
>From: "Brian W. Kenny" <[log in to unmask]>
>Subject: Protohistoric/Contact Period Conference
>Cc: [log in to unmask]
>
>[ AzTeC / SWA SASIG ] :
>
>In Reference to:
>http://www.swanet.org/discussion/98/9.html
>http://www.swanet.org/discussion/98/4.html
>
>
>From: Deni J. Seymour <[log in to unmask]>
>
>The Transition from Prehistory to History in the Southwest: An
>Interdisciplinary Approach To The Protohistoric / Contact Period
>
>February 27, 28, and March 1, 1998
>Best Western Rio Grande Inn, Albuquerque, New Mexico
>
>SCHEDULE 
>
>Friday, February 27
>8:00-8:30 AM  Registration and Welcome
>8:30-8:45 AM  Introduction
>
>8:45-10:00 AM  Session 1 -- Coronado and the Entradas:  Spanish Exploration
>and Contact
>
>Carroll Riley, Discussant
>
>Disputed Routes of Coronado
>Carroll L. Riley
>
>The Jimmy Owens Site:  New Perspectives on the Coronado Expedition
>Donald J. Blakeslee
>
>>From Blanco Canyon, Texas to the Archives in Seville:  New Developments in
>Assessing the Diagnostic Artifact Inventory of the Coronado Route
>Gayle Hartmann
>
>First Contact:  Re-evaluating the Coronado Era Documents as an
>Archaeological Snapshot
>William K. Hartmann
>
>Lo Llano: Europeans on the Southern High Plains of 1541
>John M. Morris
>
>10:00-10:30 AM  Break
>
>10:30-11:30 AM  Session 1 continued
>
>The Road to Cibola:  Historical Issues Concerning the Coronado Expedition
>and the New Mexico Entrada in 1540
>Joseph P. Sanchez
>
>The Controversial Journey of Fray Marcos de Niza
>Madeleine Turrell Rodack
>
>El Carrizal
>Roy B. Brown 
>
>Roots of the Missions Systems and the Alcaldes
>Jose Rivera
>
>Discussion
>
>11:30-1:30 PM  Lunch
>
>1:30-3:00 PM  Session 2 -- The Pueblo Perspective
>
>Ann F. Ramenofsky, Discussant
>
>Feather People and Shell People, Summer People and Winter People:
>Archaeological and Ethnohistorical Evidence for the origins of Taos Pueblo
>Jeffrey L. Boyer
>
>The Political Organization of the Protohistoric Cities of Cibola
>Keith W. Kintigh
>
>Reorganization, Intensification and Accommodation:  Alternating Pueblo
>Responses to Spanish Contact
>Frances Levine
>
>Geography of Seventeenth Century Rio Grande Pueblos 
>Elinore Barrett
>
>Reconstructing Pueblo Responses to Spanish Missionization in the American
>Southwest:  Assessing Architectural Relationships
>Gregson Schachner
>
>Franciscan Awatovi:  Architecture on the Cusp of History
>Preston Thayer
>
>3:00-3:30 PM  Break
>
>3:30-5:00 PM  Session 2 continued
>
>Regional patterns of Pueblo Textile Production and Exchange, A.D. 1400-1850
>Laurie D. Webster
>
>Zuni Population Dynamics, A.D. 1300-1680:  The Effect of European Diseases
>Over the Contact Period
>Suzanne L. Eckert
>
>The Transition from History to Prehistory:  Archaeology and Ethnohistory in
>the Eastern Pueblo Provinces
>David H. Snow
>
>Pueblo Women, Production and Status in the Post-Conquest Southwest
>Kim Sonderegger
>
>Dogs of the Southwest Pueblos
>Dody Fugate
>
>Discussion
>
>Saturday, February 28
>8:00-9:00 AM  NMAC Business Meeting
>
>9:00-9:45 AM  Session 3 -- Tying  it All Together 
>
>Discussant for Morning Sessions -- David Wilcox
>
>The End of "Prehistory"
>John R. Welch
>
>On the Rocks:  Evidence for Cultural Contact and Change at Petroglyph
>National Monument, Albuquerque, New Mexico
>Matthew Schmader
>
>Filling the Gap Between Prehistory and History in Arizona:  A Statewide View
>Dennis Gilpin
>
>9:45-10:30 AM  Session 4 -- A Southern Perspective
>
>Jumano/Suma Descendants of the Eastern Extension of the Jornada Mogollon
>Patrick Beckett
>
>The Suma Indians of El Paso and Northern Chihuahua/Sonora Mexico:  A Case
>Study on the Need for an Interdisciplinary Approach to the Protohistoric
>Period
>Bill Lockhart
>
>Sobaipuri, Jocome, and the Chiricahua Apache
>Deni J. Seymour
>
>10:30-11:00 AM  Break
>
>11:00-12:00 AM  Session 5 -- On the Edge:  Peripheral Groups in the
>Protohistoric
>
>Diet Breadth and the Numic Expansion:  An Empirical Test of the Bettinger
>and Baumhoff Model
>David Kilby
>
>El Gran Teguayo and Trans-Great Basin Trade
>David M. Brugge
>
>Introduced Historic Artifacts on Prehistoric Sites in Arizona
>Don Simonis
>
>Discussion for Morning Sessions
>David Wilcox
>
>12:00-1:30 PM  Lunch
>
>1:30-4:00 PM  Session 6 -- Late Arrivals:  Navajo, Apache, and Athapaskan
>Groups in the Southwest
>
>Curtis Schaafsma, Discussant
>
>Navajo History and the Protohistoric Period of the American Southwest
>Richard M. Begay and Miranda Warburton
>
>The Transition from Prehistory to History in the Mimbres Region
>Gary M. Brown 
>
>Dendrochronology of the Dinetah
>Pat Hancock
>
>Conquest, Replacement, or Transition?:  The Prehistoric and Historic Period
>Yavapai in Central Arizona
>Peter J. Pilles, Jr. and James M. McKie
>
>2:30-3:00 PM  Break
>
>The Truth is Out There:  Some Musing on Cultural Affinity
>James Copeland
>
>"These People Are Very Spirited and Belligerent" - Spanish Documentary
>Sources on Early Colonial Apache Warfare
>Ingo Schroeder
>
>The Navajo Abandonment of Dinetah
>Ronald Towner
>
>Discussion
>
>4:00-4:15 PM  Break
>
>4:15-5:00 PM  Session 7 -- Protohistoric Ceramic Studies (Pre-Workshop)
>
>Mary-Ellen Walsh-Anduze and Kelley Hays-Gilpin, Discussants and Workshop
>Facilitators
>
>Population Change and Time:  Assessing the Reliability and Validity of
>Biscuit and Sankawi Ceramics from the Lower Chama, New Mexico
>Gerry Raymond
>
>Looking for Sherds in All the Wrong Places:  Identifying Late Prehistoric
>and Early Historic Pottery in the Santa Cruz Drainage and the Papagueria
>Lee Fratt and Linda M. Gregonis
>
>Identifying Protohistoric Ceramics in South-Central Arizona
>Mary-Ellen Walsh-Anduze and Kathleen Henderson
>
>5:30-7:00 PM  Dinner at Rio Grande Cantina
>
>Saturday Night
>7:00-9:00 PM  Session 8 -- Ceramic Workshop
>
>Participants will examine various ceramic types and typologies from the
>Protohistoric Period.  Because there are too many cultural areas for
>in-depth discussion, the workshop will focus on opening lines of
>communication regarding identification and contextual analysis of ceramic
>assemblages from the protohistoric.  
>
>Sunday, March 1
>
>8:00-8:30 AM   Poster viewing
>               (See registration form to submit a poster)
>
>8:30- 9:45 AM  Session 9 -- Environmental and Dietary Impacts of European
>Contact
>
>Discussant TBA
>
>"We Were Born To It":  Native Americans, Fire, and Environmental Cultural
>Continuity
>John Herron
>
>Beyond the Mission:  Faunal Procurement Change at Quarai, New Mexico
>Dee A. Jones
>
>Wild and Domestic Animal Use at Early Historic Sites in the Northern
Southwest
>Linda Mick-O'Hara
>
>Putting Ecology Back Into the History of Human Groups in the Southwest
>Dan Scurlock
>
>Discussion
>
>10:00-11:00 AM  Brunch
>
>11:00 AM-5:00 PM  Field Trips
>
>This Schedule is subject to change!
>
>
>SPONSORS
>
>This conference is sponsored by Lone Mountain Archaeological Services, the
>New Mexico Archaeological Council, and COAS Publishing and Research.
>
>GREETINGS!
>
>We are pleased to announce a conference that focuses on the
>Protohistoric/Contact Period in the American Southwest and Northern Mexico.
> The response to the idea has been tremendous, and we are fortunate to have
>some of the regions' most prominent archaeologists, historians, and
>ethnohistorians presenting their research.  Results of the conference will
>be published.
>
>GENERAL INFORMATION
>
>Registration
>
>Registration cost is $25.00 per participant; the cost will increase to
>$30.00 for those registering the first day of the conference.  This fee
>includes all sessions and the Saturday evening ceramic workshop.
>
>Hotel Accommodations
>
>All conference sessions will be held at the Best Western Rio Grande Inn
>near the Old Town District of Albuquerque.  Conference rates are available:
>$59 for a single room (one king-size bed), $69 for a double (two queen-size
>beds).  No charge for extra people.  Call 1-800-843-9500 and mention that
>you are attending the conference sponsored by Lone Mountain Archaeological
>Services.
>(We need to fill a quota of rooms to get a decent conference room rate.)
>
>Several other nearby hotels are listed for your convenience:
>
>Days Inn…...………………(505) 836-3297
>Express Inn………………..(505) 247-4023
>Motel 6…………………….(505) 831-8888
>Old Town B & B…………..(505) 764-9144
>Travelers Inn………………(505) 242-5228
>
>Field Trips
>
>On Sunday afternoon, there will be time for those who wish to visit one of
>the many archaeological/historical sites in the Albuquerque vicinity.
>Tentative plans are to arrange trips to Petroglyph National Monument,
>Salinas National Monument, Kuaua at the Coronado State Monument, and the
>ruins at San Cristobal.  Some parks may charge an admission fee.
>
>Saturday Evening Dinner
>
>If you would like to attend dinner at the Rio Grande Cantina on Saturday
>evening (less than one block from the hotel), please indicate so on your
>registration form.  Dinner will include chips and salsa and a New Mexican
>style entrιe of your choice.  Full bar service will also be available. 
>
>Getting There
>
>By air: Albuquerque International Airport serves most major airlines and
>rental car companies.  Taxis to the conference hotel should run $10-12; an
>airport shuttle service (Checker Airport Express) picks up arriving
>passengers every 15 minutes.  One-way to the hotel costs $9.88; round-trip
>is $17.57 (save your receipt and call 765-1234 for return reservations).
>
>By car: Take I-40 to exit 157-A (Rio Grande Blvd.) and head south.  The Rio
>Grande Inn is on the right (west) side at 1015 Rio Grande Blvd.
>	
>
>
>
 
Anita Cohen-Williams
Listowner of HISTARCH, SUB-ARCH, and SPANBORD
Co-listowner/manager of ANTHRO-L
Contributing Editor, Anthropology, Suite101 <http://www.suite101.com>
[log in to unmask]
<http://www.freeyellow.com/members2/reflib/index.html>

ATOM RSS1 RSS2