El Fin Del Mundo: A Clovis Site in Sonora, Mexico (Anthropological Papers, 84) - Softcover

 
9780816552993: El Fin Del Mundo: A Clovis Site in Sonora, Mexico (Anthropological Papers, 84)

Inhaltsangabe

In a remote desert corner of Sonora, Mexico, the site of El Fin del Mundo offers the first recorded evidence of Paleoindian interactions with gomphotheres, an extinct species related to elephants. The Clovis occupation of North America is the oldest generally accepted and well-documented archaeological assemblage on the continent. This site in Sonora, Mexico, is the northernmost dated late Pleistocene gomphothere and the youngest in North America. It is the first documented intact buried Clovis site outside of the United States, the first in situ Paleoindian site in northwestern Mexico, and the first documented evidence of Clovis gomphothere hunting in North America. The site also includes an associated upland Clovis campsite. This volume also describes a paleontological bone bed below the Clovis level, which includes a rare association of mastodon, mammoth, and gomphothere.

El Fin del Mundo presents and synthesizes the archaeological, geological, paleontological, and paleoenvironmental records of an important Clovis site.

Contributors
Joaquín Arroyo-Cabrales
Jordan Bright
James K. Feathers
Edmund P. Gaines
Thanairi Gamez
Gregory W. L. Hodgins
Vance T. Holliday
Susan M. Mentzer
Carmen Isela Ortega-Rosas
Manuel R. Palacios-Fest
Guadalupe Sánchez
Ismael Sánchez-Morales
Kayla B. Worthey
Kristen Wroth

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Vance T. Holliday was faculty member of the Department of Geography at the University of Wisconsin-Madison from 1986 to 2002. Since 2002 he has been affiliated with both the School of Anthropology and Department of Geosciences at the University of Arizona. He is executive director of the Argonaut Archaeological Research Fund, which is devoted to exploring the early peopling of the greater Southwest. His interests include Paleoindian archaeology and geoarchaeology, as well as Quaternary soils and paleoenvironments, and Paleolithic geoarchaeology of eastern Europe.

Guadalupe Sánchez is at the National Institute of Anthropology and History and a member of the Mexican National System of Researchers. She has studied the geoarchaeology and lithic technology of sites in northern Mexico together with hunter-gather prehistory, paleoethnobotany, and paleoecology of Northern Mexico. Her research has led to over fifty articles in international journals and books. Her 2016 book Los Primeros Mexicanos: Late Pleistocene/Early Holocene People of Sonora, received honorable mention for Best Archaeological Investigation in Mexico.

Ismael Sánchez-Morales is the curator of anthropology at the Arizona Museum of Natural History. He specializes in the study of lithic technologies of archaeological hunter-gatherers and the interactions between foraging societies and the landscapes they occupy. His research focuses on the Paleoindian and Archaic occupations of northwest Mexico and the American Southwest and on the Middle Stone Age of North Africa.

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