Falls Creek Rock Shelters

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21st century archaeological methods
academic archaeology
American Southwest archaeology
ancestral Puebloan connections
ancient Colorado history
ancient cultural preservation
ancient Southwest communities
anthropology of the Southwest
anthropology research Southwest
archaeological collaboration
archaeological methodology
archaeological preservation
archaeological site reexamination
archaeological synthesis
archaeology and cultural landscapes
archaeology and tribal relations
archaeology of perishable materials
archaeology of shelter sites
Basketmaker culture
Basketmaker II Tradition
bioarchaeology Southwest
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chronometry in archaeology
collaborative archaeology
Colorado archaeology
cultural heritage management
cultural heritage Southwest
Durango archaeology
Durango history
Earl Morris archaeologist
Eastern Basketmakers
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Falls Creek Rock Shelters
forthcoming
historical records in archaeology
history of Southwest archaeology
Indigenous archaeology
Indigenous material culture
Indigenous perspectives archaeology
interdisciplinary archaeology
legacy collections archaeology
material culture analysis
museum collections Southwest
Native American history southwest
perishable materials preservation
prehistoric rock shelters
prehistoric Southwest
prehistoric Southwest lifeways
prehistorical cultural identity
Robert Burgh archaeology
rock art analysis
rock shelters archaeology
scientific archaeology
Southwest archaeological sites
Southwest US prehistory
tribal consultation archaeology

Product details

  • ISBN 9781647692698
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 216 x 279mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: University of Utah Press,U.S.
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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An important reanalysis of archaeological materials excavated and curated decades ago, with lessons for similar investigations in the future.

Dawn M. Mulhern is a professor of anthropology and associate provost at Fort Lewis College where she has also served as NAGPRA Coordinator and continues to engage in repatriation work. She previously worked in the Repatriation Osteology Laboratory at the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. With Mona Charles, she has a chapter on Basketmaker mortuary patterns in Ancient Southwestern Mortuary Practices. She coedited Bioarchaeology of the Southwest with Ann L. W. Stodder.

Mona C. Charles has spent most of her career in Southwest Colorado where she taught the Fort Lewis College archaeological field school and worked with the collections at the Center of Southwest Studies. While at the Animas Museum, she was project director on two IMLS grants and a national NAGPRA grant. She is perhaps best known for her research on the Eastern Basketmakers. Her work has been published in the KIVA, Southwestern Lore, and the edited volume The Mesa Verde World.