SOUTHWEST SEMINARS PRESENTS
ANCIENT SITES AND ANCIENT STORIES II

ancient2_2007

OFFERED AS A BENEFIT FOR THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONSERVANCY

MONDAY EVENINGS AT 6 PM AT HOTEL SANTA FE

April 9 Dr. Steve Lekson
Associate Professor of Anthropology and Curator of Anthropology, Museum of Natural History, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, Author, Chaco Meridian: Centers of Political Power in theAncient Southwest; The Archaeology of Chaco Canyon (in press); Salado Archaeology of the Upper Gila,New Mexico; Archaeology of the Mimbres Region (in press); Great Pueblo Architecture of Chaco Canyon
The Rest of the Rio: Archaeology of the Rio Grande from Socorro to El Paso

April 16 Kathy Fiero
Archaeologist (ret.), Mesa Verde National Park, National Park Service
An Obsession With Cliff Dwellings: Preserving Mesa Verde

April 23 Dr. Christine VanPool
Visiting Instructor, Department of Anthropology, University of Missouri;Co-editor with Todd L. VanPool and David A. Phillips, Jr., Religion in the Prehistoric Southwest; and co-author, with Todd L. VanPool, Signs of the Casas
Grandes Shamans; and “Gender in Middle Range Societies: A Case Study in Casas Grandes Iconography”,in American Antiquity
Shamans of the Casas Grandes

April 30 Michael Bremer
Archaeologist, U.S. Forest Service
The Past and the Future of Gallina Archaeology

May 7 Dr. William Doelle
President, Center for Desert Archaeology, Tucson, Arizona
Will the Evidence for the 14th Century Hohokam Population Collapse Be Destroyed by the Modern Phoenix Population Explosion?

May 14 Dr. Richard I. Ford
Arthur F. Thurnau Professor of Anthropology, Director, Ethnobotanical Laboratory, University of Michigan-Ann Arbor
Never Abandoned: Tewa Pueblos of the Rio Chama Drainage

May 21 Dr. John Ware
Executive Director, Amerind Foundation, Dragoon, Arizona; Archaeologist
Eastern Pueblo Social History: Some Old and New Ideas

May 28 Anna Sofaer
Founder, The Solstice Project
Mystery of Chaco Canyon

June 4 Dr. Dean E. Arnold
Professor of Anthropology, Wheaton College, Illinois
Mexico, Peru, and Guatemala: Modern Peasant Potters and Their Contributions to Understanding the Unwritten Past

June 11 Dr. Kathleen Whitaker
Director, Indian Arts Research Center, School of Advance Research
Chief White Antelope Blanket

$10 per lecture or $50 Series Subscription for 10 Lectures
10% of the Ticket Price Donated to the Archaeological Conservancy

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