SOUTHWEST SEMINARS PRESENTS
ANCIENT SITES, ANCIENT STORIES II 2014

ancient2_2014

TO HONOR AND ACKNOWLEDGE THE WORK OF THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONSERVANCY
A PUBLIC PROGRAM GRACIOUSLY ASSISTED BY HOTEL SANTA FE, A PICURIS PUEBLO ENTERPRISE

MONDAY NIGHTS AT 6 P.M. AT HOTEL SANTA FE

March 17 Troy Sice (Zuni) and Ray Tsalate (Zuni)
Innovative Fetish Carving Artists Troy Sice: 3rd generation carver, grandson of George H. CheeChee, nephew of Ramie & Miguel Haloo Ray Tsalate: Wheelwright Native Youth Artist Fellowship, protégé of Troy, now in collection of Museum of Northern Arizona
Zuni Culture Through Our Art

March 24 Dr. David Kilby
Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Graduate Coordinator, Department of Anthropology and Applied Archaeology, Eastern New Mexico University, Portales; Archaeologist and Researcher, Clovis and Folsom Archaeology of the American West, Southwest, and Plains sites: Blackwater Draw, Murray Springs, Mockingbird Gap, Folsom, NM site, Boca Negra Wash, Demolition Road, Deann’s Site, Nall Playa, and newly identified Beach Cache, North Dakota
Ice Age Time Capsules: Clovis Caches and Pleistocene Problems

March31 Dr. David Wilcox
Anthropologist and Archaeologist, Senior Research Associate (ret.), Museum of Northern Arizona, Flagstaff Recipient, Byron S. Cummings Award & Professional Archaeologist of the Year Award Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society Past Chairman, Arizona. Archaeological Advisory Commission
Macrocosm and Microcosm in Southwestern Archaeology: An Historical Perspective

April 7 Dr. Eric Blinman
Archaeologist and Director, Office of Archaeological Studies; former acting director, Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, Museum of New Mexico; Colloquium Participant, (2007) Past Climate Change: Human Survival Strategies, Narsaq, Greenland, hosted by King Carl XVI of Sweden; Research conducted in paleoclimate studies, tribal consultations, archaeomagnetic dating, social history reconstruction of Ancestral Puebloans, as well as Pueblo pottery and textiles.
Ceramic Ecology From Clay to Sherd: Making & Breaking Pots in the Name of SW Archaeology

April 14 Ron Barber
Engineer, Accelerator Operations and Technology-Mechanical Design Engineering (AOT-MDE)), Los Alamos National Laboratory and Researcher, Stone Calendar Research Project
Ancient Stone Calendars of the Southwest

April 21 Matt Barbour
Archaeologist and Research Associate, Office of Archaeological Studies
Site Manager, Jemez Historic Site, New Mexico Monuments, Office of Cultural Affairs
The History of Jemez Province

April 28 Dr. Marcel Kornfeld
Professor of Archaeology, Department of Anthropology, University of Wyoming Editor, Plains Anthropologist and Associate Editor, Reviews in Anthropology Board of Directors, Rocky Mountain Anthropological Society; Author, The First Rocky Mountaineers: Coloradans Before Colorado; Co-Author (w/M.L. Larson & G. Frison), Pre-Historic Hunter-Gatherers of the High Plains and Rockies.

Mountains, Plains, and Foothills: Paleoindian Occupations & Human Adaptations

May 5 Dr. J. Andrew Darling and Barnaby Lewis (Akimel O’odham)
Dr. Andrew Darling: Mesoamerican & Southwest Archaeologist; Co-Editor (w/J. Snead & C. Erickson), Landscapes of Movement: Trails, Paths, and Roads in Anthropological Perspective; Principal Investigator and Co-Owner, Southwest Heritage Research, LLC; Former Director, Gila River Indian Community Cultural Resources Management Program. Barnaby (Akimel O’odham) Tribal Historic Preservation Officer, Gila River Indian Community, Traditional Singer of the songs of Akimel O’odham culture.
Songscapes: Trails and Song Culture of the Akimel O’odham

May 12 Joe Day & Janice Day (Hopi)
Owners of Tsakurshovi Traditional Hopi Arts. Janice Day, Hopi basketmaker from Second Mesa
Joe Day former missionary to the Navajo in Utah and former director, Head Start, Flagstaff
Cultural Context of Hopi Arts and Crafts

$12 at the door ~ or ~ $90 for the Series of 9 Lectures

Lectures – 50 Mondays a year

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