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Dogs in the Southwest (22-3)

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Dogs in the Southwest (22-3)

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Dogs in the Southwest (22-03) (Hardcopy)
$ 3.00
Dogs in the Southwest (22-03) (PDF)
$ 3.00
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Volume 22-3 (Summer 2008)

This special theme issue explores some of the roles that dogs have played in the Southwest, from prehistory to the present.

Contributors discuss archaeological evidence of dogs; the changing roles and uses of dogs among various groups; their place in traditional stories; material culture made from dog bones and dog hair; depictions of dogs in Ancestral Pueblo, Mimbres, and Hohokam material culture as well as Southwestern and Yoeme art; their use as weapons against Native Americans by the Spaniards; and the ways in which dogs contribute to our sense of place.

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This issues articles include:
• Dogs in the Southwest – Tobi Taylor, Center for Desert Archaeology; Alan Ferg, Arizona State Museum; Dody Fugate, Museum of Indian Arts and Culture
• Early Dog Burials in the Southern Southwest – Jennifer A. Waters, Desert Archaeology, Inc.
• Pueblo Dogs – Dody Fugate, Museum of Indian Arts and Culture
• Pueblo Dog Tales – David H. Snow, Cross-Cultural Research Systems
• Basketmaker Dog-hair Sashes from Obelisk Cave – Rachel Freer and Mike Jacobs, Arizona State Museum
• A Rare Breed – Alan Ferg, Arizona State Museum
• Canid Sacrifices from Homol’ovi I – Vincent M. LaMotta, University of Illinois at Chicago
• Itzcuintle: Ancient Mexican Dog Food – Marc Thompson, El Paso Museum of Archaeology
• When is a Dog in Mimbres Art? – J. J. Brody, University of New Mexico
• Mimbres Dog Descendents – Toby Taylor, Center for Desert Archaeology
• Hohokam Dogs and Iconography at Pueblo Grande – Steven R. James, California State University at Fullerton; Michael S. Foster, Logan Simpson Design
• Dogs in the Desert: Repatriation – Alan Ferg, Arizona State Museum
• Going to the Dogs: Studying Valley Fever in the Southwest – T. Michael Fink
• An Unsettling Image – William H. Doelle, Center for Desert Archaeology
• The Setting on of Dogs – Richard Flint, Center for Desert Archaeology
• Yoeme Dog Pascola Masks – Tom Kolaz, Southwest Center
• Old Dogs and Some New Tricks – Alan Ferg, Arizona State Museum
• Back Sight – William H. Doelle, Center for Desert Archaeology

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