SOUTHWEST SEMINARS PRESENTS
ANCIENT SITES AND ANCIENT STORIES 2010

ancient_2010

OFFERED AS A BENEFIT FOR THE OFFICE OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDIES

January 4 Dr. Tim Maxwell
Archaeologist and Emeritus Director Office of Archaeological Studies, Museum of New Mexico
Mesoamerica, the Southwest and Those Places In-Between

January 11 Jeff Hanson
Archaeologist, Statistical Research, Inc., Albuquerque, New Mexico Office
Mark Hungerford, Archaeologist, Bureau of Reclamation, U.S. Department of the Interior
Righting History: Ft. Craig and the Buffalo Soldiers

January 18 Dr. Robert Dello-Russo
Archaeologist and Deputy Director, Office of Archaeological Studies. Museum of New Mexico
Climate Change and the Fate of a Clovis Oasis in West-Central New Mexico
Exciting Interdisciplinary Discoveries at the Water Canyon Paleo-Indian Site

January 25 Stephen H. Lekson
Archaeologist, Curator and Professor of Anthropology and Editor, Kiva
University of Colorado Museum of Natural History
What Happened to Mimbres and Where Did Casas Grandes Come From?

February 1 Dr. Vance Holliday
Archaeologist and Professor of Anthropology, University of Arizona
Clovis Archaeology at the End of the World: Did Clovis People Witness the End of the World?

February 9 David Grant Noble
(Tuesday) Editor, writer, and fine art photographer
Chacoan Great Houses: Evolving Interpretations

February 15 Dr. John Kantner, RPA
Archaeologist and Vice-President, School for Advanced Research on the Human Experience
Trumpets, Turquoise, and Tchamahias: The Wealth of Chaco Canyon

February 22 Dr. James Watson
Assistant Curator of Bioarchaeology, Arizona State Museum, Professor, School of Anthropology, University of Arizona
A Tooth Per Child: Health Consequences for the Earliest Farmers in the Southern Southwest

March 2 Steve Post
Archaeologist and Project Director, Office of Archaeological Studies, Museum of New Mexico
Between Paleo-Indian and Pueblo: 6,000 Years of the Archaic Period in the Northern Rio Grande

March 8 Dr. Robert Preucel
Chair, Department of Anthropology Chair, University of Pennsylvania
Was A.V. Kidder Right? Rethinking the Pueblito Phenomenon

10% OF THE NET DONATED TO THE OFFICE OF ARCHEOLOGICAL STUDIES, MUSEUM OF NEW MEXICO
$12 AT THE DOOR OR $80 FOR A SERIES OF 10 LECTURES

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