Description
Contributors to this issue examine archaeological, environmental, linguistic, historical, and geographical data on a macro-regional scale in their attempts to understand the complex issues of Mogollon-Zuni relationships and Zuni origins.
Articles include:
- Exploring Zuni Origins – David A. Gregory, Desert Archaeology, Inc., and David R. Wilcox, Museum of Northern Arizona
- Zunian as a Linguistic Isolate – Jane H. Hill, University of Arizona
- Zuni Traditional History – T. J. Ferguson, Anthropological Research, LLC
- Paleoenvironment and Zuni Origins – David A. Gregory, Desert Archaeology, Inc., Fred L. Nials, Desert Archaeology, Inc., and Jeffrey S. Dean, University of Arizona
- Archaeological Methods for Tracing Zuni Origins – Jeffery J. Clark, Center for Desert Archaeology
- The Archaic Origins of the Zuni – R. G. Matson, University of British Columbia, Retired
- The Economic Origins of Zuni – Jonathan E. Damp, Zuni Cultural Resource Enterprise
- Mogollon, Zuni, and Sky Islands – Michael W. Diehl, Desert Archaeology, Inc.
- Ceramics and Zuni Exchange, Migraton, and Identity – Barbara J. Mills, University of Arizona, and C. Dean Wilson, New Mexico Office of Archaeological Studies
- Rock Art of the Zuni Region: Boundaries, Traditions, and Networks of Communication – Polly Schaafsma, Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, and M. Jane Young, University of New Mexico, Retired
- A Perishables Perspective on Mogollon-Zuni Relationships – Laurie D. Webster, University of Arizona
- Zuni’s Place in the Long-Distance Exchange Systems – Arthur W. Vokes, Arizona State Museum
- Zuni Settlement Patterns: A.D. 950-1680 – Keith Kintigh, Arizona State University
- Zuni in the Puebloan and Southwestern Worlds, A.D. 1200-1600 – David R. Wilcox, Museum of Northern Arizona, David A. Gregory, Desert Archaeology, Inc., and J. Brett Hill, Center for Desert Archaeology
- From Cushing to Compliance: Doing Archaeology at Zuni – Jonathan Damp, Zuni Cultural Resource Enterprise
- Zuni Language Distribution – David A. Gregory, Desert Archaeology, Inc., and David R. Wilcox, Museum of Northern Arizona
- Back Sight – William H. Doelle, President & CEO, Center for Desert Archaeology