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Full Description
Tracking Ancient Footsteps celebrates William D. Lipe's five-decade career in Southwestern and conservation archaeology. From the arid expanses of Glen Canyon, the Red Rock Plateau, and Cedar Mesa in Utah, to the relatively lush Dolores Valley and Mesa Verde regions of Colorado, Lipe participated in the key projects defining much of what is known today about the ancient Native American past in the Southwest. And, in 1974, he provided a timely definition for "public archaeology" that influences researchers and land managers to the present time. In Tracking Ancient Footsteps, nine of his close colleagues share their experiences, providing a chronology of one man's life intersecting with our understanding of Southwestern Prehistory, the role of government land-holding agencies, and the archaeological profession as a whole.
Contents
Preface and Acknowledgments1. Introduction
R.G. Matson and Timothy A. Kohler
2. The Archaeology of Glen Canyon: "The Place No One Knew"
Don D. Fowler
3. Glen Canyon Archaeology, Then and Now: Contributions in Hindsight
Phil R.Geib
4. Basketmaker II and Cedar Mesa
R.G. Matson
5. Basketmaker III, Pueblo I, and the Dolores Archaeological Project
Sarah H. Schlanger and Timothy A. Kohler
6. Research, Public Education, and Native American Collaboration: The Crow Canyon Archaeological Center
Mark D. Varien and Ricky R. Lightfoot
7. Conservation Archaeology and the Southwestern Anthropological Research Group
W. James Judge
8. The Conservation Model Today and Historic Preservation
Lynne Sebastian
9. A Conversation with Bill Lipe
References
Contributors



