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  • av David Leedom Shaul
    1 270,-

    "In Piros and Prehistory, David Leedom Shaul turns his attention to the Piro language, once spoken by the people of the Piro pueblos in New Mexico but extinct since approximately the year 1900. While arguments have been made in favor of Piro belonging to the Tiwa branch of the Tanoan family, Shaul counters this classification with a detailed rebuttal, firmly establishing Piro within the Tanoan family but outside of the Tiwa branch. Shaul's arguments use linguistic analyses coupled with historic and prehistoric records of migration and cultural interaction. Following the establishment of Piro as a Tanoan language, much of the linguistic analysis involves determination of the aspects of Piro that were inherited from the earlier Proto-Tanoan versus those aspects that were incorporated later as a result of borrowing from other languages in the context of interaction. This book lays out the linguistic argument that the similarities between Piro and Tiwan languages result from borrowing, not common ancestry, and it provides a record of contact between groups and likely linguistic borrowing and evolution based on these movements"--

  • av Gary E. Machlis
    510 - 1 270,-

  • av David Alan Charlet
    796,-

    Nevada is one of the most mountainous states in the US. Yet mapping out exactly where one range begins and another ends has never been done--until now. In this volume David Charlet provides maps and descriptions for all 319 mountain ranges in the state. Divided into three parts, the book presents a simple system recognizing the primary landscape features of Nevada. Part I describes the methods used to define the boundaries of the ranges and divides the state into meaningful landforms. Part II describes the ecological life zones and their vegetation types. Part III describes the individual mountain ranges. Each mountain range entry contains a descriptive narrative and a data summary that includes the county or counties in which the range occurs, whether the author has visited and collected plants there, the highest point, the base elevation, a brief discussion of the geology, any historic settlements or post offices located in the range, the distribution of life zones, and a list of all conifers and flowering trees. The result of over thirty years of exploration and study throughout the state, this is a long-overdue compendium of Nevada's mountains and associated flora. This book is a required reference for anyone venturing out into the Nevada wilds.

  • av Robert W Adler
    186,-

    An appeal to modernize the Law of the River to reflect current and evolving values and interests

  • av Don Holmes
    510,-

    "The highpoints of the fifty states range from Alaska's 20,310-foot-high Mount McKinley to 345 feet at Lakewood Park in Florida. Some highpoints, such as Mount Mitchell in North Carolina and New Hampshire's Mount Washington, can be reached by car on a sightseeing drive. Others, including Colorado's Mount Elbert or Mount Marcy in New York, are accessible as wilderness day hikes. Still others, such as Mount Rainier in Washington or Gannett Peak in Wyoming, are strenuous and risky mountaineering challenges that should be attempted only by experienced climbers. Whatever your level of skill and interest, these varied highpoints offer a diverse range of experiences. The third edition of this classic guide updates route descriptions and maps, changes to private property ownership and public lands requirements, lists of guides and outfitters, and essential online resources. As with the two popular previous editions, Highpoints of the United States is arranged alphabetically by state, each site description accompanied with a map, photographs, information on trailhead, main and alternative routes, elevation gain, conditions, historical and natural history notes, and lists of potential guides or outfitters. Appendices include a list of highpoints by region and by elevation, useful resources, and a personal log for the unashamed "peak-bagger." Whether you're an armchair hiker or a seasoned climber, interested only in your state's highest point or all fifty, this book will be an invaluable companion and reference"--

  • av Stephen S Lottridge
    510,-

    Coming of age in the 1950s in a now-abandoned mining town

  • av Robert J. Stokes
    1 366,-

    The first book to compile data on communal structures from different times across the Mogollon region.

  • av Glen E. Rice
    1 446,-

    New applications for and reassessments of Hohokam platform mounds

  • av Michael F. Rondeau
    1 270,-

    A ready reference to current fluted point research across the Far West

  • av Emily Lena Jones
    1 196,-

    "The extent of human impact on world environments is undeniable. At scales ranging from local to global, investigations continue to demonstrate that the ecosystems to which we currently belong are structured by human behavior. Catastrophic events such as war, disaster, disease, or economic decay have, at various times throughout history, led to the human abandonment of particular environments. What happens to a human-structured environment when the manner in which people use it abruptly changes? In Questioning Rebound, authors Emily Lena Jones and Jacob L. Fisher explore the archaeological record of the Americas during the period immediately following European contact, a time when the human footprint on the land abruptly shifted. During this era of disease-driven mortality, genocide, incarceration, and forced labor of Indigenous peoples, American landscapes changed in fundamental ways, producing short-lived ecosystems that later became the basis of myths regarding the natural state of environments across the Americas. Questioning Rebound explores the record and the causes of environmental change during the period following European contact, featuring case studies throughout the Americas. While both the record for and the apparent causes of the changes in the human footprint vary, the record of post- contact environmental change consistently reflects the impacts of past social upheaval."--

  • av Jeffrey Mathes McCarthy & Robin Kundis Craig
    690 - 1 716,-

  • av Eric A. Eliason, Taylor G. Petrey & Cory Crawford
    876 - 1 870,-

  • av Christine Elyse Blythe
    1 716,-

    Brings together new and previously published essays to cover the diverse scope of scriptures in Latter Day Saint traditions

  • av John W. Ives
    1 386,-

    Links new research with legacy collections to enliven one of the most extraordinary stories in American indigenous history

  • av Heidi Roberts, Jerry D. Spangler & Richard V. N. Ahlstrom
    1 466,-

  • av Anna Marie Prentiss
    1 196,-

    Combines academic and Indigenous insights to interpret the archaeological record of a long-lived household in British Columbia

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