Kristin Hedman | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (original) (raw)

Address: Urbana, Illinois, United States

less

Uploads

Papers by Kristin Hedman

Research paper thumbnail of Transforming the Dead: Culturally Modified Bone in the Prehistoric Midwest edited by Eve A. Hargrave, Shirley J. Schermer, Kristin M. Hedman, and Robin M. Lillie Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press, 2015. 369 pp

American Anthropologist, 2018

Research paper thumbnail of Excavations at the Trotier Site in French Cahokia, St. Clair County, Illinois

Research paper thumbnail of Paradigms lost: Mound 72's Beaded Cape Burial reconfigured

Research paper thumbnail of Archaeological Investigations at Marlin Miller #2: Weaver in the LaMoine Valley of Hancock County, Illinois

Research paper thumbnail of Mound 72’s Principal Individuals: A Reassessment of Sex and Its Importance to Mississippian Mortuary Practices

Research paper thumbnail of Temporal Patterns in Diet and Population Movement within Greater Cahokia

The 84th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, 2019

Research paper thumbnail of The archaeology of the East St. Louis Mound Center. Part 1, The southside excavations

Research paper thumbnail of Late Pre-contact Ethnogenesis, Resilience, and Movement in the Face of Climate Variation in the Upper Illinois River Valley

Research paper thumbnail of Disentangling the Late Pre-Contact Native History of Northern Illinois: Ongoing Research in the Legacy Collections of the Fisher Mound and Village Site, Will County, Illinois

Research paper thumbnail of Cahokia and Corn: Multidisciplinary Research on the Timing and Intensity of Maize Consumption in the American Bottom

Research paper thumbnail of Contextualizing Diaspora within an Urbanized Cahokia

Research paper thumbnail of Stirling and Moorehead phase craft production at Cahokia's Fingerhut Tract, St. Clair County, Illinois

Research paper thumbnail of Cahokia Mound 72: Reinterpreting Meaning

Research paper thumbnail of Late Precolumbian Subsistence Change, Socio-political Transformation, and Ethnogenesis in the Upper Illinois River Valley

The 84th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, 2019

Research paper thumbnail of Interpreting Isotopic and Macrobotanical Evidence for Early Maize in the Eastern Woodlands: A Response to Hart and Colleagues

American Antiquity, Apr 1, 2021

In the following response to Hart and colleagues (2021) we clarify our interpretations of the arc... more In the following response to Hart and colleagues (2021) we clarify our interpretations of the archaeological record for maize use from western Illinois. The robust archaeological record, newly obtained AMS dates, and evaluations of enamel apatite combine to support a late date for maize cultivation in this region. We reiterate that maize histories in the Eastern Woodlands may vary among different regions.

Research paper thumbnail of The Luthy Alps Site: AMs Dates, Stable Isotopes, and Maize Consumption in the Central Illinois River Valley at the Late Woodland–Mississippian Interface

Research paper thumbnail of The Genetic Legacy of the Mississippians

Research paper thumbnail of Late Archaic Lifeways in Southeastern Wisconsin: Evidence from the Jaco Site (47JE1192)

Research paper thumbnail of People and the early Illinois landscape: The history beneath our feet

University of Illinois College of ACEs, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Isotopic Evidence of Diet and Place of Origin in the Midcontinent

Research paper thumbnail of Transforming the Dead: Culturally Modified Bone in the Prehistoric Midwest edited by Eve A. Hargrave, Shirley J. Schermer, Kristin M. Hedman, and Robin M. Lillie Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press, 2015. 369 pp

American Anthropologist, 2018

Research paper thumbnail of Excavations at the Trotier Site in French Cahokia, St. Clair County, Illinois

Research paper thumbnail of Paradigms lost: Mound 72's Beaded Cape Burial reconfigured

Research paper thumbnail of Archaeological Investigations at Marlin Miller #2: Weaver in the LaMoine Valley of Hancock County, Illinois

Research paper thumbnail of Mound 72’s Principal Individuals: A Reassessment of Sex and Its Importance to Mississippian Mortuary Practices

Research paper thumbnail of Temporal Patterns in Diet and Population Movement within Greater Cahokia

The 84th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, 2019

Research paper thumbnail of The archaeology of the East St. Louis Mound Center. Part 1, The southside excavations

Research paper thumbnail of Late Pre-contact Ethnogenesis, Resilience, and Movement in the Face of Climate Variation in the Upper Illinois River Valley

Research paper thumbnail of Disentangling the Late Pre-Contact Native History of Northern Illinois: Ongoing Research in the Legacy Collections of the Fisher Mound and Village Site, Will County, Illinois

Research paper thumbnail of Cahokia and Corn: Multidisciplinary Research on the Timing and Intensity of Maize Consumption in the American Bottom

Research paper thumbnail of Contextualizing Diaspora within an Urbanized Cahokia

Research paper thumbnail of Stirling and Moorehead phase craft production at Cahokia's Fingerhut Tract, St. Clair County, Illinois

Research paper thumbnail of Cahokia Mound 72: Reinterpreting Meaning

Research paper thumbnail of Late Precolumbian Subsistence Change, Socio-political Transformation, and Ethnogenesis in the Upper Illinois River Valley

The 84th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, 2019

Research paper thumbnail of Interpreting Isotopic and Macrobotanical Evidence for Early Maize in the Eastern Woodlands: A Response to Hart and Colleagues

American Antiquity, Apr 1, 2021

In the following response to Hart and colleagues (2021) we clarify our interpretations of the arc... more In the following response to Hart and colleagues (2021) we clarify our interpretations of the archaeological record for maize use from western Illinois. The robust archaeological record, newly obtained AMS dates, and evaluations of enamel apatite combine to support a late date for maize cultivation in this region. We reiterate that maize histories in the Eastern Woodlands may vary among different regions.

Research paper thumbnail of The Luthy Alps Site: AMs Dates, Stable Isotopes, and Maize Consumption in the Central Illinois River Valley at the Late Woodland–Mississippian Interface

Research paper thumbnail of The Genetic Legacy of the Mississippians

Research paper thumbnail of Late Archaic Lifeways in Southeastern Wisconsin: Evidence from the Jaco Site (47JE1192)

Research paper thumbnail of People and the early Illinois landscape: The history beneath our feet

University of Illinois College of ACEs, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Isotopic Evidence of Diet and Place of Origin in the Midcontinent

Research paper thumbnail of Beyond Collapse: Archaeological Perspectives on Resilience, Revitalization, and Transformation in Complex Societies

by J. Heath Anderson, Ronald "Sonny" Faulseit, Gary Feinman, Tristram Kidder, Nicola Sharratt, Julie A Hoggarth, Christina Conlee, Jakob Sedig, Andrea Torvinen, Scott Hutson, Kari A. Zobler, Thomas E Emerson, Kristin Hedman, Maureen E Meyers, Chris Rodning, Jayur Mehta, Rebecca Storey, Matthew Peeples, Christopher Pool, Victor Thompson, and Richard Sutter

The last several decades have seen the publication of a considerable amount of scholarly and popu... more The last several decades have seen the publication of a considerable amount of scholarly and popular literature concerning the collapse of complex societies, yielding a fair amount of comparative data and hypotheses regarding this phenomenon. More recently, scholars have begun to challenge these works, rejecting the notion of collapse altogether in favor of focusing on concepts such as resilience and transformation. Driven by these developments, archaeologists have turned their attention to what occurs in the aftermath of sociopolitical decline, attempting to identify factors that contribute to the regeneration, transformation, or reorganization of complex sociopolitical institutions. Subsequent research has provided important data shedding light on political environments that were once characterized as “dark ages.” In that time, general theoretical approaches have transformed as well, and recent frameworks reconsider collapse and reorganization not as unrelated or sequential phenomena but as integral components in a cyclical understanding of the evolution of complex societies. The most recent of these approaches incorporates the tenets of Resilience Theory, as developed by environmental scientists.
In March 2013, an international conference held at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale brought together scholars with diverse theoretical perspectives to present and synthesize new data and approaches to understanding the collapse and reorganization of complex societies. No restrictions were imposed regarding chronological periods, geographical regions or material specialties, resulting in a wide-ranging potential for comparative analysis. This publication is the outcome of that meeting. It is not organized merely as a collection of diverse case studies, but rather a collaborative effort incorporating various data sets to evaluate and expand on theoretical approaches to this important subject. The works contained within this volume are organized into five sections: the first sets the stage with introductory papers by the editor and distinguished contributor, Joseph Tainter; the second contains works by distinguished scholars approaching collapse and reorganization from new theoretical perspectives; the third presents critical archaeological analyses of the effectiveness of Resilience Theory as a heuristic tool for modeling these phenomena; the fourth section presents long-term adaptive strategies employed by prehistoric societies to cope with stresses and avoid collapse; the final section highlights new research on post-decline contexts in a variety of temporal and geographic ranges and relates these data to the more comprehensive works on the subject.

Research paper thumbnail of Variation in strontium isotope ratios of archaeological fauna in the Midwestern United States: a preliminary study

Journal of …, Jan 1, 2009

Research paper thumbnail of Emerson et al 2016 Cahokia Mound 72 Beaded Burial plus Supl

Log In