Description
In this issue:
A Complicated Pattern: Pursuing the Meaning of Salado in Southwestern New Mexico — Jeffery J. Clark and Deborah L. Huntley, Archaeology Southwest
Who or What Was Salado? — Jeffery J. Clark and Deborah L. Huntley, Archaeology Southwest
Mule Creek Ecology and Settlement — J. Brett Hill, Hendrix College and Archaeology Southwest
Ancient Farming and Gathering near Mule Creek — Michael W. Diehl, Desert Archaeology, Inc.
Religious Architecture and Continuity, 1200–1450: Evidence from the Fornholt Site and Ormand Village — Katherine A. Dungan, University of Arizona and Archaeology Southwest
Mule Creek Obsidian in the Time of Salado — Robert M. Jones, University of Arizona and Archaeology Southwest
Maverick Mountain Series and Salado Polychrome Origins — Patrick D. Lyons, Arizona State Museum and Archaeology Southwest
Pottery, Heritage, and Archaeology in the Greater Upper Gila Region, 1200–1450 — Deborah L. Huntley, Archaeology Southwest
Geologic Diversity and Ceramic Provenance in the Greater Upper Gila Region — Deborah L. Huntley, Archaeology Southwest, and Mary F. Ownby, Desert Archaeology, Inc.
Salado Polychrome Style and Iconography — Deborah L. Huntley, Archaeology Southwest, and Patrick D. Lyons, Arizona State Museum and Archaeology Southwest
Perceiving the Pattern: Some Answers and New Directions — Jeffery J. Clark and Deborah L. Huntley, Archaeology Southwest
Long-term Protection of the Places of the Past: Priority Cultural Resource Assessments and the Salado Preservation Initiative — Andy Laurenzi, Archaeology Southwest
Back Sight — William H. Doelle, Archaeology Southwest