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  Archaeology Southwest - "The Next Generation"


Information about the authors.

  • Elizabeth Bagwell graduated from the University of New Mexico in 2006. Her dissertation is titled Domestic Architectural Production in Northwest Mexico.

  • Wesley Bernardini graduated from Arizona State University in 2002. His dissertation, The Gathering of the Clans: Understanding Ancestral Hopi Migration and Identity, A.D. 1275-1400, won the Society for American Archaeology's Dissertation of the Year Award in 2003.

  • Michael Bletzer will graduate from Southern Methodist University in 2007. His dissertation is titled "Pueblos Without Names": A Case Study of Piro Settlement in Early Colonial New Mexico.

  • Tiffany Clark graduated from Arizona State University in 2006. Her dissertation is titled Production, Exchange, and Social Identity: Identifying Chupadero Pottery.

  • Sunday Eiselt graduated from the University of Michigan in 2006. Her dissertation is titled The Emergence of Jicarilla Apache Enclave Economy During the Nineteenth Century in Northern New Mexico.

  • Severin Fowles graduated from the University of Michigan in 2004. His dissertation, The Making of Made People: The Prehistoric Evolution of Hierocracy among the Northern Tiwa of New Mexico, won the Society for American Archaeology's Dissertation of the Year Award in 2005.

  • Donna Glowacki graduated from Arizona State University in 2006. Her dissertation is titled The Social Landscape of Depopulation: The Northern San Juan, A.D. 1150-1300.

  • Carrie Heitman will graduate from the University of Virginia in 2009. Her dissertation is titled Creation of a Center Place: Re-evaluating the 'House' in Chaco Canyon, NM, A.D. 850-1180.

  • Deborah Huntley graduated from Arizona State University in 2004. Her dissertation is titled Interaction, Boundaries, and Identities: A Multiscalar Approach to the Organizational Scale of Pueblo IV Zuni Society.

  • Jeremy Kulisheck graduated from Southern Methodist University in 2005. His dissertation is titled The Archaeology of Pueblo Population Change on the Jemez Plateau, A.D. 1200 to 1700: The Effects of Spanish Contact and Conquest.

  • Matthew Liebmann graduated from the University of Pennsylvania in 2006. His dissertation, "Burn the Churches, Break Up the Bells": The Archaeology of the Pueblo Revolt Revitalization Movement in New Mexico, A.D. 1680-1696, won the Society for American Archaeology's Dissertation of the Year Award in 2007.

  • Vincent M. LaMotta graduated from the University of Arizona in 2006. His dissertation is titled Zooarchaeology and Chronology of Homol'ovi I and Other Pueblo IV Period Sites in the Central Little Colorado River Valley, Northern Arizona.

  • Guadalupe Sanchez will graduate from the University of Arizona in 2007. Her dissertation is titled Los Primeros Mexicanos: Late Pleistocene/Early Holocene Occupation of Sonora.

  • Gregson Schachner graduated from Arizona State University in 2007. His dissertation is titled Population Circulation and the Transformation of Ancient Cibola Communities.

  • Julie Solometo graduated from the University of Michigan in 2004. Her dissertation is titled The Conduct and Consequences of War: Dimensions of Conflict in East-Central Arizona.

  • Steve Swanson will graduate in 2007 from Arizona State University. His dissertation is titled The Ecology of Early Farming: A Mogollon Case Study.

  • Julia I. Meyers will graduate in 2007 from the University of Arizona. Her dissertation is titled Prehistoric Wall Decoration in the American Southwest: A Behavioral Approach.




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