An Introduction to the Study of Southwestern Archaeology, with a preliminary account of the excavations at Pecos, and a summary of Southwestern archaeology today (1969)

by Alfred Vincent Kidder

Other authorsIrving Rouse (Introduction)
Paperback, 1969

LCC

AAS E78 S7 K5 1969

Collection

Description

Alfred Vincent Kidder's Introduction to the Study of Southwestern Archaeology, a classic of New World archaeology, was the first regional synthesis and remains unsurpassed as a summary of Pueblo archaeology. It provides an excellent guide to historic and prehistoric sites of the Southwest, as they were known at the time, as well as a preliminary account of Kidder's exemplary excavation at Pecos. Kidder was one of the pioneers of the technique of stratigraphy; he also broke new ground in approaches to the study of pottery and in the application of ethnological data to the interpretation of archaeological remains. In a new introduction to the book, Douglas W. Schwartz discusses the history of Pecos Pueblo, the development of southwestern archaeology, and the enduring significance of Kidder's work.… (more)

Publication

Yale University Press (1969), Edition: New, 392 pages

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