Dramatic economic changes transformed an isolated 13th-century village of farmer-hunters in the arid grasslands of southeastern New Mexico into a community heavily engaged in long-distance bison hunting and intense exchange with the Puebloan world to the west. Individual chapters consider the procurement and use of bison, antelope, deer, dogs, rabbits, rodents, birds, molluscs, and fish; the importance of maize; changing patterns of fuel use; flaked and groundstone tools; and the ceramics which saw a sudden influx of pottery from as far afield as west-central New Mexico, southeastern Arizona, and northern Mexico. Speth's concluding chapter discusses the economic and political forces that may have pulled this isolated Plains-margin village into the Pueblo world.
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Publisher: Museum of Anthropology
Month of Publication: January
Year of Publication: 2004
Location: Ann Arbor, MI
# of Pages: 429
Price: $44
ISBN: 978-0-915703-54-8
Monograph Series / Number: Memoirs, 37
Tables / Illustrations: 177 tables, 96 illustr.