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Papers by Mark Raab

Research paper thumbnail of Isla Alor- Olmec to Contact in the La Venta Hinterland.pdf

Research paper thumbnail of Extreme Late Holocene Climate Change In Coastal Southern California

Research paper thumbnail of Economic growth in Mesoamerica: Obsidian consumption in the coastal lowlands

Economic growth is rarely examined for ancient states and empires despite its prominence as a top... more Economic growth is rarely examined for ancient states and empires despite its prominence as a topic in modern economies. The concept is debated, and many measures of growth are inaccessible for most of the ancient world, such as gross domestic product (GDP). Scholars generally have been pessimistic about ancient economic growth, but expectations derived from dramatic growth in modern economies can lead to overlooking important evidence about economic change in the past. The measure of economic growth that we adopt focuses on the economic well-being of ordinary households. We evaluate one domain of evidence: imported obsidian implement consumption in the coastal lowlands of Mesoamerica. We situate the obsidian study against a backdrop of ideas concerning economic growth in ancient societies because such topics have received only modest attention for Mesoamerica. For the major Mesoamerican ceramic periods, we (1) display the already-known early technological shift in predominant techniques of obsidian implement production—from percussion and bipolar flakes to prismatic pressure blades—that led to more efficient tool production for long-distance trade, (2) note other lithic technological improvements, and (3) evaluate increased obsidian access with a growing market system in the last centuries of the prehispanic record.

Research paper thumbnail of Environmental Imperatives Reconsidered

Effects of Medieval Climatic Anomaly on California Indian cultural patterns.

Research paper thumbnail of Bones, Boats and Biface Bias: The Early Holocene Mariners of Eel Point, San Clemente Island, California. 2004, Jim Cassidy, Mark Raab, Nina Konenenko. American Antiquity 69: 109-130.

Research paper thumbnail of California Prehistory, Archaeology and the Myth of Paradise. 2004 L. Mark Raab and Terry L. Jones, eds. University of Utah Press.

Research paper thumbnail of California Maritime Archaeology, A San Clemente Island Perspective. 2009, L. Mark Raab, Jim Cassidy, Andrew Yatsko and William J. Howard. Altamira Press.

Research paper thumbnail of Isla Alor: Olmec to Contact in the La Venta Hinterland. 2012, Mathew A. Boxt, L. Mark Raab and Rebecca Gonzalez Lauck. In Fanning the Sacred Flame, Mesoamerican Studies in Honor of H. B. Nicholson, Matthew A. Boxt and Brian D. Dillon, eds., pp 55-91, University of Colorado Press.

Research paper thumbnail of Do Cultural Explanations of the Past Have a Future?

North American Archaeologist, 1981

Research paper thumbnail of Settlement of the Prairie Margin: Archaeology of the Richland Creek Reservoir, Navarro and Freestone Counties, Texas: 1980-1981 . L. Mark Raab. ; Historic Indian Groups of the Choke Canyon Reservoir and Surrounding Area, Southern Texas . T. N. Campbell, T. J. Campbell. ; Archaeological Investigat...

American Anthropologist, 1984

Research paper thumbnail of Radiocarbon Confusion Dating: Problems and Prospects for the Study of Baja California Sur Prehistory

Research paper thumbnail of Environmental Imperatives Reconsidered

Research paper thumbnail of Middle-range theory in archaeology: a critical review of origins and applications

American Antiquity, 1984

... Finally, we will present examples of theory-building in archaeology that we believe more near... more ... Finally, we will present examples of theory-building in archaeology that we believe more nearly conform to the original concept of middle-range theory, and point out why we believe these strategies better serve the needs of archaeology. 258 [Vol. 49, No. 2, 1984 Page 5. ...

Research paper thumbnail of Trans-Holocene Marine Mammal Exploitation on San Clemente Island, California: A Tragedy of the Commons Revisited

Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 2000

Occupied from ca. 7040 B.C. to A.D. 1400, the Eel Point Site (CA-SCLI-43) on San Clemente Island,... more Occupied from ca. 7040 B.C. to A.D. 1400, the Eel Point Site (CA-SCLI-43) on San Clemente Island, California represents one of the longest sequences of near-continuous marine resource exploitation on the west coast of North America. Faunal remains suggest transitions from heavy exploitation of fur seals and sea lions during the early Holocene, to increased hunting of cetaceans at mid-Holocene, to a focus on sea otters and fish during the late Holocene. These trends are consistent with patterns of overexploitation and economic intensification on the California and Oregon mainland, but they also suggest watercraft-based hunting earlier on the island than elsewhere. Fur seal and sea lion bones mainly represent females and juveniles, indicating that exploitation of island rookeries was guided more by self-interest than by principles of game conservation. Two intervals of temporary site abandonment, ca. 6150–3970 B.C. and A.D. 1020–1400, were both followed by periods of increased marine mammal exploitation and may reflect intervals during which marine mammal populations rebounded. Broad-scale diachronic trends in the zooarchaeological remains do not correlate with flux in paleo-sea temperatures and are best interpreted as products of overhunting and increased use of watercraft over time.

Research paper thumbnail of Environmental Imperatives Reconsidered: Demographic Crises in Western North America during the Medieval Climatic Anomaly

Current Anthropology, 1999

Research paper thumbnail of Isla Alor- Olmec to Contact in the La Venta Hinterland.pdf

Research paper thumbnail of Extreme Late Holocene Climate Change In Coastal Southern California

Research paper thumbnail of Economic growth in Mesoamerica: Obsidian consumption in the coastal lowlands

Economic growth is rarely examined for ancient states and empires despite its prominence as a top... more Economic growth is rarely examined for ancient states and empires despite its prominence as a topic in modern economies. The concept is debated, and many measures of growth are inaccessible for most of the ancient world, such as gross domestic product (GDP). Scholars generally have been pessimistic about ancient economic growth, but expectations derived from dramatic growth in modern economies can lead to overlooking important evidence about economic change in the past. The measure of economic growth that we adopt focuses on the economic well-being of ordinary households. We evaluate one domain of evidence: imported obsidian implement consumption in the coastal lowlands of Mesoamerica. We situate the obsidian study against a backdrop of ideas concerning economic growth in ancient societies because such topics have received only modest attention for Mesoamerica. For the major Mesoamerican ceramic periods, we (1) display the already-known early technological shift in predominant techniques of obsidian implement production—from percussion and bipolar flakes to prismatic pressure blades—that led to more efficient tool production for long-distance trade, (2) note other lithic technological improvements, and (3) evaluate increased obsidian access with a growing market system in the last centuries of the prehispanic record.

Research paper thumbnail of Environmental Imperatives Reconsidered

Effects of Medieval Climatic Anomaly on California Indian cultural patterns.

Research paper thumbnail of Bones, Boats and Biface Bias: The Early Holocene Mariners of Eel Point, San Clemente Island, California. 2004, Jim Cassidy, Mark Raab, Nina Konenenko. American Antiquity 69: 109-130.

Research paper thumbnail of California Prehistory, Archaeology and the Myth of Paradise. 2004 L. Mark Raab and Terry L. Jones, eds. University of Utah Press.

Research paper thumbnail of California Maritime Archaeology, A San Clemente Island Perspective. 2009, L. Mark Raab, Jim Cassidy, Andrew Yatsko and William J. Howard. Altamira Press.

Research paper thumbnail of Isla Alor: Olmec to Contact in the La Venta Hinterland. 2012, Mathew A. Boxt, L. Mark Raab and Rebecca Gonzalez Lauck. In Fanning the Sacred Flame, Mesoamerican Studies in Honor of H. B. Nicholson, Matthew A. Boxt and Brian D. Dillon, eds., pp 55-91, University of Colorado Press.

Research paper thumbnail of Do Cultural Explanations of the Past Have a Future?

North American Archaeologist, 1981

Research paper thumbnail of Settlement of the Prairie Margin: Archaeology of the Richland Creek Reservoir, Navarro and Freestone Counties, Texas: 1980-1981 . L. Mark Raab. ; Historic Indian Groups of the Choke Canyon Reservoir and Surrounding Area, Southern Texas . T. N. Campbell, T. J. Campbell. ; Archaeological Investigat...

American Anthropologist, 1984

Research paper thumbnail of Radiocarbon Confusion Dating: Problems and Prospects for the Study of Baja California Sur Prehistory

Research paper thumbnail of Environmental Imperatives Reconsidered

Research paper thumbnail of Middle-range theory in archaeology: a critical review of origins and applications

American Antiquity, 1984

... Finally, we will present examples of theory-building in archaeology that we believe more near... more ... Finally, we will present examples of theory-building in archaeology that we believe more nearly conform to the original concept of middle-range theory, and point out why we believe these strategies better serve the needs of archaeology. 258 [Vol. 49, No. 2, 1984 Page 5. ...

Research paper thumbnail of Trans-Holocene Marine Mammal Exploitation on San Clemente Island, California: A Tragedy of the Commons Revisited

Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, 2000

Occupied from ca. 7040 B.C. to A.D. 1400, the Eel Point Site (CA-SCLI-43) on San Clemente Island,... more Occupied from ca. 7040 B.C. to A.D. 1400, the Eel Point Site (CA-SCLI-43) on San Clemente Island, California represents one of the longest sequences of near-continuous marine resource exploitation on the west coast of North America. Faunal remains suggest transitions from heavy exploitation of fur seals and sea lions during the early Holocene, to increased hunting of cetaceans at mid-Holocene, to a focus on sea otters and fish during the late Holocene. These trends are consistent with patterns of overexploitation and economic intensification on the California and Oregon mainland, but they also suggest watercraft-based hunting earlier on the island than elsewhere. Fur seal and sea lion bones mainly represent females and juveniles, indicating that exploitation of island rookeries was guided more by self-interest than by principles of game conservation. Two intervals of temporary site abandonment, ca. 6150–3970 B.C. and A.D. 1020–1400, were both followed by periods of increased marine mammal exploitation and may reflect intervals during which marine mammal populations rebounded. Broad-scale diachronic trends in the zooarchaeological remains do not correlate with flux in paleo-sea temperatures and are best interpreted as products of overhunting and increased use of watercraft over time.

Research paper thumbnail of Environmental Imperatives Reconsidered: Demographic Crises in Western North America during the Medieval Climatic Anomaly

Current Anthropology, 1999

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