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|a UAMI
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|a Holes in our moccasins, holes in our stories :
|b Apachean origins from the Promontory, Franktown, and Dismal River Archaeological Records /
|c edited by John W. Ives and Joel C. Janetski.
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|a Apachean origins from the Promontory, Franktown, and Dismal River Archaeological Records
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|a Salt Lake City :
|b The University of Utah Press,
|c [2022]
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|c ©2022
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|a 1 online resource (ix, 308 pages) :
|b illustrations, maps
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|a text
|b txt
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|a online resource
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|a Includes bibliographical references and index.
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|t Linguistic relationships between Apachean and Northern Athapaskan : on the possibility of "Eastern Athapaskan" /
|r by Conor Snoek, Michaela Stang, and Sally Rice --
|t Seeking congruency : search images, archaeological records, and Apachean origins /
|r by John W. Ives --
|t Promontory culture in the Eastern Great Basin : an update /
|r by Joel C. Janetski --
|t Promontory revisited /
|r by John W. Ives, Joel C. Janetski, George R. Chournos, Gabriel M. Yanicki, Lindsay Johansson, and Jennifer Hallson --
|t The Promontory moccasins and footwear landscapes in Late Period Western North America /
|r by John W. Ives, Michael Billinger and Erika Sutherland --
|t Follow the women : ceramics and ethnogenesis in the intermountain West /
|r by Gabriel M. Yanicki --
|t Predicting group size and structure using multiple methods at Promontory Cave 1, Utah /
|r by Jennifer Hallson and Courtney Lakevold --
|t Art in the time of Promontory Cave : enhancements and reflections /
|r by Andrew Lints, John W. Ives, and Hilary McDonald --
|t Chapter 10. Archaeobotanical investigations in the Promontory Caves /
|r by David Rhode --
|t The local and the distant reflected in the perishable technologies from the Promontory Caves /
|r by Elizabeth A. Goldberg, Katherine J. Latham, and Edward A. Jolie --
|t Bison ecology, environmental conditions and the Promontory Phase, northeast Utah /
|r by Vandy E. Bowyer and Jessica Z. Metcalfe --
|t Glimpses of Promontory Phase settlement practices and social networks : the artifact and faunal assemblages from Site 10OA275 /
|r by Brooke S. Arkush --
|t Franktown Cave, Colorado : a Promontory culture site on the Western margin of the Great Plains /
|r by Kevin P. Gilmore, John W. Ives, and Derek Hamilton --
|t The Dismal River complex and early Apache (Ndee) presence on the Central Great Plains /
|r by Matthew E. Hill, Jr., Sarah J. Trabert, and Margaret E. Beck --
|t Ways of becoming : the Promontory phenomenon /
|r by John W. Ives and Joel C. Janetski.
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|a "In 1930-31, Julian Steward recovered hundreds of well-worn moccasins-along with mittens, bison robe fragments, bows, arrows, pottery, bone and stone tools, cordage, gaming pieces, and abundant faunal remains-making Utah's Promontory Caves one of the most remarkable hunter-gatherer archaeological records in western North America. Steward recognized that the moccasins and other artifacts were out of place in the Great Basin and instead were characteristic of the Canadian Subarctic and northern Plains. He further suspected they reflected ancestral Apachean populations who left the Canadian Subarctic, ultimately making their homes in the Southwest and southern Plains. Steward's findings languished for decades, with the Promontory materials regarded as enigmatic. This volume matches Steward's work with results from new excavations in Promontory Caves 1 and 2 in chapters illustrating that the early Promontory Phase resulted from an intrusive population with a large game hunting population very different from nearby late Fremont communities. While lingering for just one or two human generations, the cave occupants began to accept people as well as material and symbolic culture from surrounding AD 13th century neighbors. The authors employ a trans-disciplinary search image to evaluate the possibility that the Promontory Phase materials reflect the presence of Apachean ancestors, with a treatment that expands to the Dismal River Aspect and Franktown Cave records (also suspected of having Apachean connections). In these records lie the seeds for the intensive Plains-Puebloan interactions of the centuries that followed" --
|c Provided by publisher.
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|a John W. (Jack) Ives is professor in the Department of Anthropology, University of Alberta, and adjunct professor at Simon Fraser University and the University of Saskatchewan. Joel C. Janetski is emeritus professor of anthropology at Brigham Young University, where he served as chair of the Department of Anthropology from 1998 to 2005.
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|a Print version record.
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|a eBooks on EBSCOhost
|b EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - Worldwide
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650 |
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|a Indians of North America
|z Great Plains
|x Antiquities
|v Congresses.
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650 |
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|a Indians of North America
|x Material culture
|z Great Plains
|v Congresses.
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650 |
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|a Interdisciplinary research
|z Great Plains
|v Congresses.
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651 |
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|a Promontory Point (Utah : Cape)
|x Antiquities
|v Congresses.
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651 |
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|a Great Plains
|x Antiquities
|v Congresses.
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|a Recherche interdisciplinaire
|z Grandes Plaines
|v Congrès.
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650 |
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|a Peuples autochtones
|z Grandes Plaines
|x Antiquités
|v Congrès.
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|a Grandes Plaines
|x Antiquités
|v Congrès.
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650 |
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|a Antiquities
|2 fast
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|a Indians of North America
|x Antiquities
|2 fast
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650 |
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|a Indians of North America
|x Material culture
|2 fast
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650 |
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7 |
|a Interdisciplinary research
|2 fast
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651 |
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|a Great Plains
|2 fast
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|a Utah
|z Promontory Point (Cape)
|2 fast
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|a proceedings (reports)
|2 aat
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|a Conference papers and proceedings
|2 fast
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|a Conference papers and proceedings.
|2 lcgft
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|a Actes de congrès.
|2 rvmgf
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|a Ives, John W.,
|e editor.
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|a Janetski, Joel C.,
|e editor.
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|a Society for American Archaeology.
|b Annual Meeting
|n (82nd :
|d 2017 :
|c Vancouver, B.C.),
|e issuing body.
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|i Print version:
|t Holes in our moccasins, holes in our stories.
|d Salt Lake City : The University of Utah Press, [2022]
|z 9781647690663
|w (DLC) 2022005956
|w (OCoLC)1296688088
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856 |
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|u https://ebsco.uam.elogim.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=3460469
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