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E-book
Author Warren, Claude N., 1932-2021, author.

Title Purple Hummingbird : a Biography of Elizabeth Warder Crozer Campbell / Claude N. Warren and Joan S. Schneider
Published Salt Lake City : The University of Utah Press, [2017]

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Description 1 online resource (xi, 194 pages) : illustrations, map
Contents Why a biography of Elizabeth Campbell? -- The purple hummingbird -- Growing up a Crozer -- Betty and Bill at the Twentynine Palms Oasis -- Life as homesteaders in Twentynine Palms -- The beginnings -- A scientist takes flight -- The great Lake Mojave "debate" : intellectual transitions -- The state of early man studies in California in 1937 : a history for curious readers -- Lake Mojave : the view from Twentynine Palms -- The death of Bill in 1944 and the aftermath -- The purple hummingbird comes home to rest : the later years -- Appendix A : Chronological table of Campbell fieldwork -- Appendix B : Elizabeth Campbell's contributions to archaeology
Summary "Elizabeth Warder Crozer Campbell and her husband, William Campbell, found themselves forced to move to the Mojave Desert in 1924, its dry climate proving to be the best for William's frail lungs burned by mustard gas in World War I. They camped at Twentynine Palm Oasis in what is now Joshua Tree National Park, homesteaded nearby, and became a central part of that early community. Life in the remote, stark landscape contrasted sharply with Elizabeth's early years of wealth and privilege in Pennsylvania, where her family owned not only farms and thoroughbreds but also coal, iron, and steel. Her resilient spirit made the best of what at first seemed like a bleak situation: she became an amateur archaeologist and exploring the desert in search of human-made artifacts became her daily work and passion. Neither Elizabeth nor William had any formal training in archaeology, so she drew from the resources at her disposal -- a family trust fund, her sharp intellect, and local scientists, especially geomorphologists, geologists, and anthropologists. A keen observer and independent thinker, she soon hypothesized that prehistoric people had lived in the California deserts along the shores of late Pleistocene lakes and waterways much earlier than was then believed. She devised a means for testing her hypothesis and found evidence to support it. Her interpretations, however, conflicted with the archaeological paradigm of the day and she was dismissed by formally trained archaeologists. Even so, she and her husband continued their work, convinced of the accuracy of her findings. Four decades later the archaeological establishment validated and accepted her ideas. Campbell's research ultimately revolutionized archaeological thought, forming the basis of today's landscape archaeology"--Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 181-189) and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Campbell, Elizabeth W. Crozer, 1893-1971.
Archaeologists -- California -- Biography
HISTORY -- Ancient -- General.
Antiquities
Archaeologists
SUBJECT California -- Antiquities. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85018868
Twentynine Palms (Calif.) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n82031910
Subject California
California -- Twentynine Palms
Genre/Form Biographies
Form Electronic book
Author Schneider, Joan S., author
LC no. 2016029055
ISBN 9781607815198
1607815192