Description
This Issue’s Articles Include:
• Archaeology and the Public in the Galisteo Basin – James E. Snead, George Mason University
• The Galisteo Basin Archaeological Sites Protection Act – Signa Larralde, Bureau of Land Management and Bob Powers, National Park Service
• Dutton’s Dirty Diggers: A Special Kind of Public Archaeology – Leslie Cohen, Laboratory of Anthropology
• The Archaeological Society of New Mexico and the Rock Art of the Galisteo Basin – J. J. Brody, University of New Mexico
• Burnt Corn Pueblo and the Tano Origins Project – James E. Snead, George Mason University
• The Petroglyph Hill Survey – James E. Snead, George Mason University, and Genevieve Head, Cabezon Consulting
• Petroglyph Hill Past and Present – Marit Munson, Trent University
• Mission Archaeology in the Galisteo Basin – Cordelia Snow, New Mexico Historic Preservation Division
• Excavations at Paa-ko Pueblo – Mark Lycett, University of Chicago
• A Model for Community Action and Preservation – Leslie Cohen, Laboratory of Anthropology
• Preservation Efforts in the Galisteo Basin – Tamara Jager Stewart, The Archaeological Conservancy
• Site Stewardship at Pueblo San Marcos – Bill Baxter
• Back Sight – William H. Doelle, Center for Desert Archaeology