Wendy Teeter | University of California, Los Angeles (original) (raw)

Papers by Wendy Teeter

Research paper thumbnail of Maya Zooarchaeology: New Directions in Method and Theory

Author(s): Beaubien, Harriet F.; Emery, Kitty F.; Henderson, John; Joyce, Rosemary; Longstaffe, F... more Author(s): Beaubien, Harriet F.; Emery, Kitty F.; Henderson, John; Joyce, Rosemary; Longstaffe, Fred L.; Masson, Marilyn A.; McKillop, Heather; Moholy-Nagy, Hattula; Pendergast, David M.; Pohl, Mary D.; Powis, Terry G.; Schwarcz, Henry P.; Seymour, Kevin L.; Stanchly, Norbert; Teeter, Wendy G.; Wake, Thomas A.; White, Christine D.; Winemiller, Terance; Wing, Elizabeth S. | Editor(s): Emery, Kitty F.

Research paper thumbnail of Recognizing Indigenous Settlement Patterns: Results from Pimu (Catalina Island, CA)

Research paper thumbnail of Maya animal utilization in a growing city : vertebrate exploitation at Caracol, Belize

"This research utilizes faunal analysis to explore how population growth aff... more "This research utilizes faunal analysis to explore how population growth affected the environment, subsistence practices and ceremonial behavior at the Maya site of Caracol, Belize and the greater Maya area. Caracol was chosen for this study for many reasons, including its continuous occupation from around 600 B.C. to 300 B.C. (Middle Preclassic) depending on the area of the city, to about A.D. 1000 (Early Postclassic) and the intensive archaeological excavation which has produced a diverse and large faunal assemblage. Most notably Caracol developed from a small village to a large Classic Maya city with a population of over 100,000 people, necessitating a complex infrastructure to meet the subsistence needs of its residents. To meet the food requirements at Caracol agricultural terraces were integrated in all parts of the city, even within the center of town. What remains unanswered is how meat was supplied to the over 100,000 people, especially as the forests were cleared for new homes. The Maya may have traveled farther, imported meat, or relied on the commensal animals that tolerate a more urban environment, such as raccoons, opossums, and rodents. Resource availability may also have necessitated a change in the way in which animals were used for ceremonial activities (from public festivals to household offerings to ancestors) at the site. Faunal remains have been collected from trash deposits, living surfaces, burials, and caches throughout Caracol and represent a diverse population that inhabited all areas of the city. In this analysis emphasis is placed on the Late Preclassic and Late Classic (A.D.600-900) Periods because these eras embody the beginning and culmination of the development of Classic Maya society. It is at these periods that the greatest change and/or stress on resources should be evident and the Maya would have to address these situations. Previous ethnographic and archaeological research from the Maya area is reviewed to help interpret the Caracol data and understand Maya resource use strategies."

Research paper thumbnail of Adding Flesh to Bones: Using Zooarchaeology Research to Answer the Big-Picture Questions

Faunal analysis can give clues to the quality of life for the elite and the general population. M... more Faunal analysis can give clues to the quality of life for the elite and the general population. Many studies have discussed how a general Maya diet was affected by population pressure, but few have looked directly at the archaeological dietary remains. This paper looks at the adaptive responses to the increasing requirements for animal resources at Caracol, Belize, such as importation of animal products, specialization of animal use strategies, and animal management.

Research paper thumbnail of Creating a new future: Redeveloping the tribal-museum relationship in the time of NAGPRA

International Journal of Cultural Property

The hope has long been that the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) w... more The hope has long been that the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) would finally bring ancestors and their cultural items home to their communities to be reconnected and rest. However, 30 years later, museums and academics still fear losing control of research and access in their intellectual pursuits. Far from true, museums have benefited in working with tribes in telling stories around their cultural history, present and future. This article shares experiences over the authors’ careers and counters the alarmist calls to arms against compliance with NAGPRA.

Research paper thumbnail of A Forensic investigation of the Ralph Glidden Human Remains Collection of the Catalina Island Museum

Research paper thumbnail of The State of the State of California Curation

Research paper thumbnail of Examining Site Functions and Relationships: The Value of Small Ridgeline Sites on Pimu/Catalina Island

Research paper thumbnail of Archaeology, Faunal Analysis and Interpretation: Lessons from Maya Studies

This article presents a non-zooarchaeological viewpoint, as a response to many of the themes pres... more This article presents a non-zooarchaeological viewpoint, as a response to many of the themes presented in this special journal issue, and based on discussions that occurred dur- ing the 2003 Society for American Archaeology Forum, Zooarchaeology in the Humid Ameri- can Tropics: Making the Most of the Data. Our experience in the Maya region shows many areas in which zooarchaeology can provide valuable contributions to better understanding the past. A fundamental need is better collaboration between field directors and faunal specialists. We highlight both the importance of expanding the contributions that faunal specialists make in understanding larger societal questions, and the need for more training in zooarchaeology as well as more in-country comparative collections and specialists. Finally, we emphasize the need for funding to support this research, including the post-field analysis. RESUMEN: Como respuesta a muchas de las cuestiones presentadas en este volumen monogra- fico, ba...

Research paper thumbnail of Jaunt VR 360 stereo video Virtual Reality camera as a tool for historic interpretation and archaeological documentation

Research paper thumbnail of Animal Utilization in a Growing City

Research paper thumbnail of A trans-holocene approach to assess maritime development on the California Channel Islands archipelago: A case study from Eel Point, San Clemente island

Research paper thumbnail of Tracking the origins and diet of an endemic island canid (Urocyon littoralis) across 7300 years of human cultural and environmental change

Quaternary Science Reviews, 2016

Understanding how human activities have influenced the foraging ecology of wildlife is important ... more Understanding how human activities have influenced the foraging ecology of wildlife is important as our planet faces ongoing and impending habitat and climatic change. We review the canine surrogacy approach (CSA)-a tool for comparing human, dog, and other canid diets in the past-and apply CSA to investigate possible ancient human resource provisioning in an endangered canid, the California Channel Islands fox (Urocyon littoralis). We conducted stable isotope analysis of bone collagen samples from ancient and modern island foxes (n=214) and mainland gray foxes (Urocyon cinereoargenteus, n=24). We compare these data to isotope values of ancient humans and dogs, and synthesize 29 Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dates that fine-tune the chronology of island foxes. AMS dates confirm that island foxes likely arrived during the early Holocene (>7300 cal BP) on the northern islands in the archipelago and during the middle Holocene (>5500 cal BP) on the southern islands. We found no evidence that island foxes were consistently using anthropogenic resources (e.g., food obtained by scavenging or direct provisioning by Native Americans), except for a few individuals on San Nicolas Island and possibly on San Clemente and Santa Rosa islands. Decreases in U. littoralis carbon and nitrogen isotope values between prehistoric times and the 19 th century on San Nicolas Island suggest that changes in human land use from Native American hunter-gatherer occupations to historical ranching had a strong influence on fox diet. Island foxes exhibit considerable dietary variation through time and between islands and have adapted to a wide variety of climatic and cultural changes over the last 7300 years. This generalist foraging strategy suggests that endemic island foxes may be more resilient to future changes in resource availability.

Research paper thumbnail of TAG 2021 Program - The Theoretical Archaeology Group Annual Meeting, April 30 - May 2, 2021.

by Marcio Teixeira-Bastos, Ian Hodder, Hannah Moots, Sophia Colello, Koji Lau-Ozawa, Lúcio Menezes Ferreira, Michael V Wilcox, Allison Mickel, Ciler Cilingiroglu, Anna Källén, Wendy Teeter, Tiffany C . Fryer, Piraye Hacıgüzeller, Supriya Varma, Swadhin Sen, Veerasamy Selvakumar, Rebecca Graff, Natalia Pulyavina, Anne Sherfield, Tânia Manuel Casimiro, Francisco Curate, Marianne Sallum, Alessandra Cianciosi, Lucy Gill, Alice Kehoe, Matthew Greer, and Kristina G Douglass

In light of the ongoing acts of anti-Black and anti-Indigenous violence that testify to the immed... more In light of the ongoing acts of anti-Black and anti-Indigenous violence that testify to the immediate need for systemic social change, the new TAG 2021 theme will focus on issues of social and racial justice in the theory, method, and practice of archaeology.

Research paper thumbnail of Portable Cultural Property: “This belongs in a Museum?”

A Companion to Cultural Resource Management, 2011

This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Importance of Curation What Is Mo... more This chapter contains sections titled:
Introduction
Importance of Curation
What Is Movable Cultural Material?
Law and Policy
Repositories and Curation
Considerations of Objects' Care
Curation Costs
Orphaned Collections
Deaccessioning
Intellectual Property and Final Reports
Education and Exhibiting Culture

Research paper thumbnail of Portable Cultural Property: "This Belongs in a Museum?"

Research paper thumbnail of Returning the tataayiyam honuuka' (Ancestors) to the Correct Home: The Importance of Background Investigations for NAGPRA Claims

Curator: The Museum Journal, 2014

The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) claims process can be frustra... more The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) claims process can be frustrating for Native American communities due to hindrances such as the lack of provenience and provenance of collections. Through historic research on and preliminary analysis of Santa Catalina Island archaeological collections assembled by Ralph Glidden and held by museums across the United States, the authors have discovered that much of the documented provenience and provenance information is missing, wrong, or at best more complicated than previously thought. The authors assert that background research of collections is imperative to ensure that ancestral remains are returned to the appropriate lineal descendants or Native American descendant community. Further, the Glidden collections show that disputed provenience and provenance information has massive implications for NAGPRA claims made by non-federally recognized tribes, such as the Gabrielino/Tongva, the Indigenous inhabitants of Santa Catalina and the Los Angeles Basin.

Research paper thumbnail of Ho’eexokre ‘eyookuuka’ro “We’re Working with Each Other”: The Pimu Catalina Island Project

SAA Archaeological Record, Jan 2015

For decades, Tongva (Gabrielino) community members, the original inhabitants of the Los Angeles B... more For decades, Tongva (Gabrielino) community members, the original inhabitants of the Los Angeles Basin, have actively battled multiple misconceptions about the community and its origins: that they are extinct; are relative latecomers to southern California, arriving as part of the “Shoshonean Wedge”; or are an imagined community of Mexican Americans lying about their heritage for personal gain and notoriety. These misinformed interpretations have hindered the Tongva community’s ability to assert their sovereign rights over the treatment of their cultural items, sacred spaces, and ancestral remains under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA).
As a result, Tongva community members have created a number of educational programs at local museums and heritage sites to provide accurate information. However, these public programs do not necessarily reach the archaeologists who shape the academic discourse regarding Tongva history and cultural lifeways. To combat this situation, the Tongva community is working with scholars to develop research programs, such as the authors’ Pimu Catalina Island Archaeology Project (PCIAP), to demonstrate that the Tongva are a vibrant living cultural community with a deep history within its southern California traditional territory. Most importantly, Ho’eexokre ’eyookuuka’ro, “We’re working with each other,” to ensure that Tongva history is represented in a way that honors the ancestors and told from a Tongva point of view.

Research paper thumbnail of CERRO PORTEZUELO FAUNAL REMAINS AND WORKED BONE: WHAT CAN BE LEARNED FROM EARLY EXCAVATED COLLECTIONS

Analyses of the faunal remains from Cerro Portezuelo indicate that the site's pre-Hispanic reside... more Analyses of the faunal remains from Cerro Portezuelo indicate that the site's pre-Hispanic residents made use of both wild and domesticated animals commonly found near lakeshores and agricultural fields. Most of the faunal assemblage examined comes from a Postclassic period residential structure, providing information regarding the animal species utilized by the early inhabitants of the area and the types of household activities they engaged in using tools made from worked bone. Examination of the collections from another part of the site shows intriguing similarities to the animal selection practices previously identified in the Epiclassic period collections from Oztoyahualco, Teotihuacan.

Research paper thumbnail of An Inventory of California Pottery at the Fowler Museum, UCLA

Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly

"The Fowler Museum at UCLA contains an abundance of provenienced pottery from prehistoric and his... more "The Fowler Museum at UCLA contains an abundance of provenienced pottery from prehistoric and historic California Indian sites.
This paper inventories these ceramics for the first time, revealing
that archaeological pottery is more widely distributed in California
than is generally understood. Museum collections remain underutilized by archaeologists. A greater appreciation of the geographical range and chronological extent of archaeological pottery would undoubtedly occur with additional published compilations of ceramic inventories by other museums."

Research paper thumbnail of Maya Zooarchaeology: New Directions in Method and Theory

Author(s): Beaubien, Harriet F.; Emery, Kitty F.; Henderson, John; Joyce, Rosemary; Longstaffe, F... more Author(s): Beaubien, Harriet F.; Emery, Kitty F.; Henderson, John; Joyce, Rosemary; Longstaffe, Fred L.; Masson, Marilyn A.; McKillop, Heather; Moholy-Nagy, Hattula; Pendergast, David M.; Pohl, Mary D.; Powis, Terry G.; Schwarcz, Henry P.; Seymour, Kevin L.; Stanchly, Norbert; Teeter, Wendy G.; Wake, Thomas A.; White, Christine D.; Winemiller, Terance; Wing, Elizabeth S. | Editor(s): Emery, Kitty F.

Research paper thumbnail of Recognizing Indigenous Settlement Patterns: Results from Pimu (Catalina Island, CA)

Research paper thumbnail of Maya animal utilization in a growing city : vertebrate exploitation at Caracol, Belize

"This research utilizes faunal analysis to explore how population growth aff... more "This research utilizes faunal analysis to explore how population growth affected the environment, subsistence practices and ceremonial behavior at the Maya site of Caracol, Belize and the greater Maya area. Caracol was chosen for this study for many reasons, including its continuous occupation from around 600 B.C. to 300 B.C. (Middle Preclassic) depending on the area of the city, to about A.D. 1000 (Early Postclassic) and the intensive archaeological excavation which has produced a diverse and large faunal assemblage. Most notably Caracol developed from a small village to a large Classic Maya city with a population of over 100,000 people, necessitating a complex infrastructure to meet the subsistence needs of its residents. To meet the food requirements at Caracol agricultural terraces were integrated in all parts of the city, even within the center of town. What remains unanswered is how meat was supplied to the over 100,000 people, especially as the forests were cleared for new homes. The Maya may have traveled farther, imported meat, or relied on the commensal animals that tolerate a more urban environment, such as raccoons, opossums, and rodents. Resource availability may also have necessitated a change in the way in which animals were used for ceremonial activities (from public festivals to household offerings to ancestors) at the site. Faunal remains have been collected from trash deposits, living surfaces, burials, and caches throughout Caracol and represent a diverse population that inhabited all areas of the city. In this analysis emphasis is placed on the Late Preclassic and Late Classic (A.D.600-900) Periods because these eras embody the beginning and culmination of the development of Classic Maya society. It is at these periods that the greatest change and/or stress on resources should be evident and the Maya would have to address these situations. Previous ethnographic and archaeological research from the Maya area is reviewed to help interpret the Caracol data and understand Maya resource use strategies."

Research paper thumbnail of Adding Flesh to Bones: Using Zooarchaeology Research to Answer the Big-Picture Questions

Faunal analysis can give clues to the quality of life for the elite and the general population. M... more Faunal analysis can give clues to the quality of life for the elite and the general population. Many studies have discussed how a general Maya diet was affected by population pressure, but few have looked directly at the archaeological dietary remains. This paper looks at the adaptive responses to the increasing requirements for animal resources at Caracol, Belize, such as importation of animal products, specialization of animal use strategies, and animal management.

Research paper thumbnail of Creating a new future: Redeveloping the tribal-museum relationship in the time of NAGPRA

International Journal of Cultural Property

The hope has long been that the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) w... more The hope has long been that the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) would finally bring ancestors and their cultural items home to their communities to be reconnected and rest. However, 30 years later, museums and academics still fear losing control of research and access in their intellectual pursuits. Far from true, museums have benefited in working with tribes in telling stories around their cultural history, present and future. This article shares experiences over the authors’ careers and counters the alarmist calls to arms against compliance with NAGPRA.

Research paper thumbnail of A Forensic investigation of the Ralph Glidden Human Remains Collection of the Catalina Island Museum

Research paper thumbnail of The State of the State of California Curation

Research paper thumbnail of Examining Site Functions and Relationships: The Value of Small Ridgeline Sites on Pimu/Catalina Island

Research paper thumbnail of Archaeology, Faunal Analysis and Interpretation: Lessons from Maya Studies

This article presents a non-zooarchaeological viewpoint, as a response to many of the themes pres... more This article presents a non-zooarchaeological viewpoint, as a response to many of the themes presented in this special journal issue, and based on discussions that occurred dur- ing the 2003 Society for American Archaeology Forum, Zooarchaeology in the Humid Ameri- can Tropics: Making the Most of the Data. Our experience in the Maya region shows many areas in which zooarchaeology can provide valuable contributions to better understanding the past. A fundamental need is better collaboration between field directors and faunal specialists. We highlight both the importance of expanding the contributions that faunal specialists make in understanding larger societal questions, and the need for more training in zooarchaeology as well as more in-country comparative collections and specialists. Finally, we emphasize the need for funding to support this research, including the post-field analysis. RESUMEN: Como respuesta a muchas de las cuestiones presentadas en este volumen monogra- fico, ba...

Research paper thumbnail of Jaunt VR 360 stereo video Virtual Reality camera as a tool for historic interpretation and archaeological documentation

Research paper thumbnail of Animal Utilization in a Growing City

Research paper thumbnail of A trans-holocene approach to assess maritime development on the California Channel Islands archipelago: A case study from Eel Point, San Clemente island

Research paper thumbnail of Tracking the origins and diet of an endemic island canid (Urocyon littoralis) across 7300 years of human cultural and environmental change

Quaternary Science Reviews, 2016

Understanding how human activities have influenced the foraging ecology of wildlife is important ... more Understanding how human activities have influenced the foraging ecology of wildlife is important as our planet faces ongoing and impending habitat and climatic change. We review the canine surrogacy approach (CSA)-a tool for comparing human, dog, and other canid diets in the past-and apply CSA to investigate possible ancient human resource provisioning in an endangered canid, the California Channel Islands fox (Urocyon littoralis). We conducted stable isotope analysis of bone collagen samples from ancient and modern island foxes (n=214) and mainland gray foxes (Urocyon cinereoargenteus, n=24). We compare these data to isotope values of ancient humans and dogs, and synthesize 29 Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS) radiocarbon dates that fine-tune the chronology of island foxes. AMS dates confirm that island foxes likely arrived during the early Holocene (>7300 cal BP) on the northern islands in the archipelago and during the middle Holocene (>5500 cal BP) on the southern islands. We found no evidence that island foxes were consistently using anthropogenic resources (e.g., food obtained by scavenging or direct provisioning by Native Americans), except for a few individuals on San Nicolas Island and possibly on San Clemente and Santa Rosa islands. Decreases in U. littoralis carbon and nitrogen isotope values between prehistoric times and the 19 th century on San Nicolas Island suggest that changes in human land use from Native American hunter-gatherer occupations to historical ranching had a strong influence on fox diet. Island foxes exhibit considerable dietary variation through time and between islands and have adapted to a wide variety of climatic and cultural changes over the last 7300 years. This generalist foraging strategy suggests that endemic island foxes may be more resilient to future changes in resource availability.

Research paper thumbnail of TAG 2021 Program - The Theoretical Archaeology Group Annual Meeting, April 30 - May 2, 2021.

by Marcio Teixeira-Bastos, Ian Hodder, Hannah Moots, Sophia Colello, Koji Lau-Ozawa, Lúcio Menezes Ferreira, Michael V Wilcox, Allison Mickel, Ciler Cilingiroglu, Anna Källén, Wendy Teeter, Tiffany C . Fryer, Piraye Hacıgüzeller, Supriya Varma, Swadhin Sen, Veerasamy Selvakumar, Rebecca Graff, Natalia Pulyavina, Anne Sherfield, Tânia Manuel Casimiro, Francisco Curate, Marianne Sallum, Alessandra Cianciosi, Lucy Gill, Alice Kehoe, Matthew Greer, and Kristina G Douglass

In light of the ongoing acts of anti-Black and anti-Indigenous violence that testify to the immed... more In light of the ongoing acts of anti-Black and anti-Indigenous violence that testify to the immediate need for systemic social change, the new TAG 2021 theme will focus on issues of social and racial justice in the theory, method, and practice of archaeology.

Research paper thumbnail of Portable Cultural Property: “This belongs in a Museum?”

A Companion to Cultural Resource Management, 2011

This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Importance of Curation What Is Mo... more This chapter contains sections titled:
Introduction
Importance of Curation
What Is Movable Cultural Material?
Law and Policy
Repositories and Curation
Considerations of Objects' Care
Curation Costs
Orphaned Collections
Deaccessioning
Intellectual Property and Final Reports
Education and Exhibiting Culture

Research paper thumbnail of Portable Cultural Property: "This Belongs in a Museum?"

Research paper thumbnail of Returning the tataayiyam honuuka' (Ancestors) to the Correct Home: The Importance of Background Investigations for NAGPRA Claims

Curator: The Museum Journal, 2014

The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) claims process can be frustra... more The Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) claims process can be frustrating for Native American communities due to hindrances such as the lack of provenience and provenance of collections. Through historic research on and preliminary analysis of Santa Catalina Island archaeological collections assembled by Ralph Glidden and held by museums across the United States, the authors have discovered that much of the documented provenience and provenance information is missing, wrong, or at best more complicated than previously thought. The authors assert that background research of collections is imperative to ensure that ancestral remains are returned to the appropriate lineal descendants or Native American descendant community. Further, the Glidden collections show that disputed provenience and provenance information has massive implications for NAGPRA claims made by non-federally recognized tribes, such as the Gabrielino/Tongva, the Indigenous inhabitants of Santa Catalina and the Los Angeles Basin.

Research paper thumbnail of Ho’eexokre ‘eyookuuka’ro “We’re Working with Each Other”: The Pimu Catalina Island Project

SAA Archaeological Record, Jan 2015

For decades, Tongva (Gabrielino) community members, the original inhabitants of the Los Angeles B... more For decades, Tongva (Gabrielino) community members, the original inhabitants of the Los Angeles Basin, have actively battled multiple misconceptions about the community and its origins: that they are extinct; are relative latecomers to southern California, arriving as part of the “Shoshonean Wedge”; or are an imagined community of Mexican Americans lying about their heritage for personal gain and notoriety. These misinformed interpretations have hindered the Tongva community’s ability to assert their sovereign rights over the treatment of their cultural items, sacred spaces, and ancestral remains under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA).
As a result, Tongva community members have created a number of educational programs at local museums and heritage sites to provide accurate information. However, these public programs do not necessarily reach the archaeologists who shape the academic discourse regarding Tongva history and cultural lifeways. To combat this situation, the Tongva community is working with scholars to develop research programs, such as the authors’ Pimu Catalina Island Archaeology Project (PCIAP), to demonstrate that the Tongva are a vibrant living cultural community with a deep history within its southern California traditional territory. Most importantly, Ho’eexokre ’eyookuuka’ro, “We’re working with each other,” to ensure that Tongva history is represented in a way that honors the ancestors and told from a Tongva point of view.

Research paper thumbnail of CERRO PORTEZUELO FAUNAL REMAINS AND WORKED BONE: WHAT CAN BE LEARNED FROM EARLY EXCAVATED COLLECTIONS

Analyses of the faunal remains from Cerro Portezuelo indicate that the site's pre-Hispanic reside... more Analyses of the faunal remains from Cerro Portezuelo indicate that the site's pre-Hispanic residents made use of both wild and domesticated animals commonly found near lakeshores and agricultural fields. Most of the faunal assemblage examined comes from a Postclassic period residential structure, providing information regarding the animal species utilized by the early inhabitants of the area and the types of household activities they engaged in using tools made from worked bone. Examination of the collections from another part of the site shows intriguing similarities to the animal selection practices previously identified in the Epiclassic period collections from Oztoyahualco, Teotihuacan.

Research paper thumbnail of An Inventory of California Pottery at the Fowler Museum, UCLA

Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly

"The Fowler Museum at UCLA contains an abundance of provenienced pottery from prehistoric and his... more "The Fowler Museum at UCLA contains an abundance of provenienced pottery from prehistoric and historic California Indian sites.
This paper inventories these ceramics for the first time, revealing
that archaeological pottery is more widely distributed in California
than is generally understood. Museum collections remain underutilized by archaeologists. A greater appreciation of the geographical range and chronological extent of archaeological pottery would undoubtedly occur with additional published compilations of ceramic inventories by other museums."

Research paper thumbnail of IPinCH Newsletter Vol. 7 (Spring 2016)

Over the course of the last decade, as IPinCH came into being-first as an idea and then an initia... more Over the course of the last decade, as IPinCH came into being-first as an idea and then an initiative-I've come to view it more as a process than as just a project. Certainly it has been first and foremost an academic initiative, at least on paper, but the reality is that we have really been from the start something different, whether we realized it or not.