Living and dying on the periphery : the archaeology and human remains from two 13th-15th century AD villages in southeastern New Mexico / Jamie L. Clark, John D. Speth
Background to the excavations at Henderson and Bloom Mound -- Synthesis of previous work at Henderson and Bloom Mound -- Architecture and occupational history at Henderson and Bloom Mound -- Material culture at Henderson and Bloom Mound : a synopsis -- Situating Henderson and Bloom Mound within a regional context : economic insights -- Broader regional context : insights from Fox Place and Rocky Arroyo -- Plains-Pueblo Interaction : economic specialists or dual economies? -- Human remains from Henderson and Bloom Mound : previously reported burials -- Previously unreported burials from the 1994-1997 excavations at Henderson -- Previously unreported burials from the 2000-2009 excavations at Bloom Mound
Summary
"The archaeology and bioarcheology of the Roswell, New Mexico, area remains one of the most understudied in the American Southwest. Two prehistoric sites, Henderson and Bloom Mound, were excavated in an area some consider "marginal." These were communities that responded to cultural system stresses in ways that are detectable in the archaeological record. The inhabitants of these communities were farmers, but had less reliance on maize than contemporary Puebloan communities to the west. They had a mixed and diverse subsistence economy which included bison hunting and consumption by the early 1200s"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes
Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on October 19, 2022)