Enigmatic and Endangered: Cultural and Natural Wonders of Greater Grand Staircase-Escalante,Nicole Croft An Outdoor Archaeological Laboratory,Jerry D. Spangler Archaeology of Greater Grand Staircase-Escalante,Douglas McFadden, Heidi Roberts, Rosemary Sucec, Richard K. Talbot, R. E. Burrillo, and Catherine Gilman Seeking the Future in the Deep Past,Christa Sadler “A stunning stretch of wild,”Susan Hand Condors in the Canyons,Andrew Gulliford Where Paleontology and Anthropology Meet,R. E. Burrillo Indigenous Landscapes of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, Rosemary Sucec “A landscape miracle,”Morgan Sjogren Archaeological Potential of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument,Peter M. Yaworsky, Kenneth B. Vernon, and Brian F. Codding The Archaic Period in Greater Grand Staircase-Escalante,R. E. Burrillo “Rivers and seep springs flowed for all,”Charley Bulletts Answering Big Questions about Greater Grand Staircase-Escalante’s Early Farmers,Heidi Roberts Ancestral Hopi Presence in the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, Lyle Balenquah Pueblo Farmers on the Grand Staircase,Douglas McFadden Who Lived on Fiftymile Mountain? R. E. Burrillo and Douglas McFadden Escalante-Area Fremont,Richard K. Talbot “A long and dignified human history,”Marsha Holland Made Possible by…Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument,Matthew Zweifel Fire Regimes and the Greater Grand Staircase-Escalante Landscape,Robert M. D’Andrea, Scott R. Anderson, Kenneth L. Cole, Matthew Zweifel, and R. E. Burrillo Learning from a Land of Many Uses: Plants, Springs, and Archaeology at Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument,David M. Sabata “A lovingly prepared meal and a magnificent wild landscape,”Blake Spalding Ancient Four Corners Potato,Lisbeth A. Louderback The San Juan Expedition,R. E. Burrillo Back Sight,William H. Doelle
Archaeology Southwest Magazine Vol. 33, Nos. 1 and 2
Issue editor: R. E. Burrillo
“Remote, wild, sprawling, Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument defies imagination. Its spectacular landscape bears witness to the oldest time of our planet, to the oldest human habitation on the Colorado Plateau, and to what often feel like the oldest debates about America’s public lands.
“I invite you to learn about this wondrous cultural and natural landscape through the words and images offered in these pages by our many partners and friends. I encourage you to bring that knowledge with you when you come to the monument and visit with respect, ready to learn more. I urge you to join us in strongly advocating for the future of Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument.”
— From the foreword by Nicole Croft, Executive Director, Grand Staircase Escalante Partners
Additional funding for this issue came from the Conservation Lands Foundation.
Enigmatic and Endangered: Cultural and Natural Wonders of Greater Grand Staircase-Escalante,Nicole Croft
Archaeology of Greater Grand Staircase-Escalante,Douglas McFadden, Heidi Roberts, Rosemary Sucec, Richard K. Talbot, R. E. Burrillo, and Catherine Gilman
This time line chronology was primarily adapted from
McFadden, Douglas A.
2016 Formative Chronology and Site Distribution on the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument: A Research Reference. Utah Cultural Resource Series No. 28. GSENM Special Publication No.4.
Fire Regimes and the Greater Grand Staircase-Escalante Landscape,Robert M. D’Andrea, Scott R. Anderson, Kenneth L. Cole, Matthew Zweifel, and R. E. Burrillo
Learning from a Land of Many Uses: Plants, Springs, and Archaeology at Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument,David M. Sabata
“A lovingly prepared meal and a magnificent wild landscape,”Blake Spalding