2018 Final Program For SAAweb
2018 Final Program For SAAweb
2018 Final Program For SAAweb
Copyright © 2018 Society for American Archaeology. All rights reserved. No part of this
publication may be reprinted in any form or by any means without prior permission from the
publisher.
Contents
11 .............. Maps
38 .............. Program
regardless of sex, gender identity and expression, sexual orientation, disability, physical
appearance, ethnicity, religion, or age. Due to their centrality in professional training and
networking in our discipline, conferences are clearly an extension of the educational and
workplace environment. As such, all office, agency, college or university, and other
does the SAA Statement and SAA Principles of Archaeological Ethics. However, should an
officers, Board of Directors, and session or workshop chairs should be considered safe
authorities with whom incidents can be discussed. SAA will not tolerate harassment of
Remarks
President Susan M. Chandler, RPA
Reports
Treasurer Deborah Nichols, RPA
Secretary Emily McClung de Tapia, RPA
Executive Director Tobi A. Brimsek
Special Report
President Susan M. Chandler, RPA
5:30 PM Presentation of Awards
Public Service Award
Gene S. Stuart Award
Archaeology Week Poster Award
Student Poster Award
Student Paper Award
Ethics Bowl Trophy
Scholarships and Fellowships
Dissertation Award
Book Awards
Award for Excellence in Archaeological Analysis
Award for Excellence in Cultural Resource Management
Award for Excellence in Public Education
Crabtree Award
Fryxell Award for Interdisciplinary Research
Award for Excellence in Latin American and Caribbean
Archaeology
Lifetime Achievement Award
New Business
Ceremonial Resolutions
6:30 PM Adjournment
6 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
SAA award recipients are selected by individual committees of SAA members—one for
each award. The Board of Directors wishes to thank the award committees for their hard
work and excellent selections, and to encourage any members who have an interest in a
particular award to volunteer to serve on a future committee.
DISSERTATION AWARD
Recipient: Katherine L. Chiou
The dissertation, “Common Meals, Noble Feasts: An Archaeological Investigation of Moche
Food and Cuisine in the Jequetepeque Valley, Peru, 600-850 C.E.,” by Katherine L. Chiou
is a transformative contribution to research well beyond the region in which this study was
situated. This body of work exemplifies archaeology’s best empirical and comparative
strengths in its investigation of the foodways of contrastive social entities at the household
and regional scales, across space, and over time. Katherine Chiou draws on a battery of
analytical methods (ethnobotany, spatial analysis, household archaeology) to generate a
model of class conflict, growing inequities, and a “gastropolitical” contribution to regional
collapse. Dr. Chiou’s prose, self-defined as a “microhistorical narrative,” is also exceptional
for its exquisite craftsmanship, which brings to the surface deep interdisciplinary
8 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
foundations that guide the researcher and this study. This work represents anthropological
archaeology at its finest.
CRABTREE AWARD
Recipient: James Warnica
James Warnica has spent a half-century documenting prehistoric sites and conducting
archaeological research in New Mexico and the adjoining states. As a teenager he began
collecting artifacts near Portales, NM. As Mr. Warnica’s interests matured, he became a
bridge between the region’s avocational and professional communities, particularly on
Paleoindian research. Co-founder of the El Llano Archaeological Society, he guided it in
collaboration with two generations of Paleoindian archaeologists and was instrumental in
preservation of threatened collections and records from Blackwater Draw, the Clovis type
site. Mr. Warnica published seven scholarly papers between 1961 and 2017 (two in
American Antiquity), culminating in a major co-authored monograph on Blackwater Draw.
He has reported dozens of archaeological sites in New Mexico. Overall, James Warnica’s
range of efforts and committed engagement with the professional archaeological
community and general public on behalf of Paleoindian and later prehistory make him a
deserving recipient of the Crabtree Award.
Bradley J. Vierra
John S. Krigbaum Tribal Historic Preservation
University of Florida
Colin D. Wren
Yin-Man Lam University of Colorado, Colorado Springs
University of Victoria
Dagmara Zawadzka
Ben Marwick Université du Québec à Montréal
University of Washington
Local Advisory Committee
Juliet E. Morrow Chair
Arkansas State University Torben Rick
Smithsonian Institution
Marit K. Munson
Trent University SAA Board of Directors
David Lindsay
Manager, Government Affairs
Elizabeth Pruitt
Manager, Education and Outreach
Amy Rutledge
Manager, Communications and
Fundraising
Cheng Zhang
Manager, Information Services
Solai Sanchez
Coordinator, Membership and Meetings
Plan now to attend the SAA 84th Annual Meeting in Albuquerque, New Mexico
April 10–14, 2019. Guidelines for contributors (Call for Submissions) who wish to
submit papers, posters, or forums for consideration are posted on SAAweb
(www.saa.org). The Online Submissions System for Albuquerque, New Mexico
will open on May 1, 2018.
Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 17
GENERAL INFORMATION
MEETING ROOM LOCATIONS the event. You do not need to be
The entire meeting is self-contained registered for the SAA Annual Meeting
within the Washington Marriott to attend the CRM Expo. You may
Wardman Park. All room designations register at meeting registration for the
are within the hotel. Expo on April 14 from 12:00 pm to 3:30
pm that day at no charge. The Expo
ABSTRACTS registration will only admit you to the
The abstracts are available to all on the Expo.
public side of SAAweb.
EMERGENCY INFORMATION CARD
Onsite, in the Atrium near registration, In your registration packet, on your
will be an Abstract Viewing Center badge and ticket sheet, SAA has
where you will be able to reference the included an Emergency Information
abstracts at your convenience through a Card. Please fill out this card completely
group of computers provided for that and slip it behind your badge in your
purpose. badge holder. Should this information be
required, it will then be readily
ANNUAL MEETING MOBILE APP accessible. Thank you.
SAA is excited to again be using a
mobile app for the 2018 Annual EXHIBITS
Meeting! The app allows you to easily The SAA Annual Meeting Exhibit Hall
access meeting info and find your provides an exciting array of products
sessions with new pinpoint location and services for you to review—you'll find
mapping. The mobile app is available for technology, field equipment, publications,
Android, Apple, and Blackberry. To archaeological services, and more! All the
access and download the app go to: tools and information you are looking for
https://saadc2018.quickmobile.mobi/ will be on display Thursday, April 12, from
10:00 am–5:00 pm; Friday, April 13, from
AWARDS CELEBRATION & ANNUAL 9:00 am–5:00 pm; and Saturday, April
BUSINESS MEETING 14, from 9:00 am–5:00 pm, in Exhibit Hall
The Society's Annual Business Meeting A. Please note that the Exhibit Hall
and Awards Presentation will be held at opens one hour later than usual on
5:00 pm on Friday in Marriott Salon 2. Thursday.
Park Tower Suite 8228, and the staffer contains different posters, whose authors
there will page him. and space assignments are listed in the
program. Please check the program or
GUEST BADGES Sessions at a Glance for the poster
Guest Badges were initiated for session schedule.
immediate family members who are
non-archaeologists and who need New in 2018 – Posters After Hours!
access to the meeting venue as guests SAA will be premiering its Posters After
of meeting registrants. Immediate family Hours session on Thursday, April 12
includes spouse/partner, parents, and from 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm in Exhibit Hall
children. Friends, colleagues, and other B South. This session will feature 100
relatives are not eligible for guest posters. With a relaxed atmosphere and
badges. The registrant must purchase a a cash bar, this session serves as the
guest badge that the guest must display perfect venue to connect with
at the meeting venue. Guest badges colleagues and discuss current
simply provide access to the meeting research.
venue. Guests are not “meeting
attendees.” If a guest badge is to be PRESS OFFICE
purchased onsite, the meeting The Press Office, located in Park Tower
registrant must accompany the guest Suite 8209, will be open Wednesday
to registration. Accompanied children through Saturday, 9:00 am–5:00 pm,
12 years of age or under are not and on Sunday, 9:00 am–12:00 pm,
required to display a guest badge. staffed by Amy Rutledge, SAA’s
Unaccompanied children may not attend manager, Communications and
the annual meeting. Fundraising.
SILENT AUCTION
Visit the Native American Scholarships
Committee (NASC) Booth 809 in the
Exhibit Hall, Exhibit Hall A, to place your
bids while contributing to a worthy
cause. How does the silent auction
work? First, sign up for a bidder number
at the NASC booth. Then, when you see
something you want, decide how much
you’d like to spend and write your bid
and bidder number on the bid sheet. Of
course, once others see your bid, they
might decide to make an offer, as well.
So, you’ll have to stop by the booth from
time to time to see if your bid is still the
highest. If not, raise it, and keep on
trying. The bidding ends Saturday at
noon.
SMOKING POLICY
Smoking is prohibited.
SOCIAL MEDIA
Join the discussion about the 83rd
Annual Meeting on Twitter #SAA2018.
Students can also contribute to the
discussion using #SAAstudents.
1pm–4pm
CRM EXPO Exhibit Hall B
South
Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 23
Summary Schedule
The sessions that make up the bulk of the program fall within seven categories:
Electronic Symposium—A discussion format in which the organizer posts the papers on
the web at least one month before the meeting. No papers are read at electronic
symposium as it is assumed that attendees will have read the material beforehand.
Generally a few minutes’ summary of the papers are the introduction to the two-hour
discussion session.
Posters After Hours— This session will feature 100 posters. With a relaxed atmosphere
and a cash bar, this session serves as the perfect venue to connect with colleagues and
discuss current research.
Any of these sessions may be “sponsored” and/or “invited.” The designation “sponsored”
indicates the support of an SAA committee or interest group, or an organization outside
SAA. The designation “invited” reflects a special status and role within the meeting, as
defined by the Program Committee Chair. All sponsored and invited sessions are subject to
review by the Program Committee, as are all other submissions, and are subject to the
three-role rule. Because numerous groups wish to sponsor sessions, the Program
Committee must balance such requests with other program goals; as a result, in some
circumstances, requests for sponsored sessions may be rejected. The only exceptions to
the review process and three-role rule are the opening and plenary sessions.
Note: All poster sessions are two hours in duration. Please check the schedule for these sessions
in Sessions at a Glance.
8:15 Mitch Allen and William B. Trousdale—The Iron Age Culture of Sistan,
Afghanistan
8:30 Victoria Sluka—Knotting Accuracy & Dimension Variation in Modern Turkmen
Carpets
8:45 Kyle Olson—Legacy Data and Ceramic Chronologies: The Case of the Gorgan
Plain, Northeastern Iran
9:00 Deborah Parrish, Jean-Luc Houle, Jamsranjav Bayarsaikhan and Matthew
Fuka—Paleodietary Analysis of Xiongnu Individuals in Zuunkhangai, Mongolia
9:15 Yuqi Li—3D Hydraulic Modeling of the Ancient Irrigation System at the MGK Site
in Xinjiang, China
9:30 Narges Bayani—Borderland Processes and the Question of BMAC in NE Iran
8-b Sarah Krantz—Interpreting Palimpsest Rock Art in the North American Southwest
8-c Joshua Keene, Tyler Laughlin and Michael Waters—Archaeological
Investigations of the Archaic and Paleoindian Occupations at Hall’s Cave, Texas
8-d Stephen L. Black and Charles Koenig—Sand, Chute, Carts, and Waddles: Eagle
Cave and Bonfire Shelter Restoration Project
8-e Kyle Riordan, Julie Field and John Dudgeon—Scanning Electron Microscopy and
Geoarchaeology of Naihehe Cave, Fiji
8-f Richard Nicolas—Using Sacred Landscape Model of Indigenous Cave Use in the
Philippines
9:15 Brenna Frasier, James Woollett, Céline Dupont-Hébert, Michael Buckley and
Vicki Szabo—Genetic and ZooMS Identification of Marine Mammal Bone from
Norse Sites in Iceland and Greenland: Insights into Historic Ecology and Norse
Economies
9:30 Samantha Walker, Kathyrn Kotar, James Savelle and Arthur Dyke—Regional
Analysis in Perspective: An Epistemological Assessment for Paleo-Inuit
Archaeology
9:45 Kyle Forsythe, Pierre Desrosiers, James Savelle and Arthur Dyke—Comparing
Lithic Procurement and Use Within the Foxe Basin, Nunavut
[18] GENERAL SESSION SURVEY, REMOTE SENSING AND SITE FORMATION IN MAYA
ARCHAEOLOGY
Room: Johnson
Time: 8:00 AM–10:15 AM
Chair: Richard Paine
Participants:
8:00 Akira Ichikawa—Intraregional Interaction in the Zapotitan Valley, El Salvador:
The San Andres Regional Center and Joya de Ceren Village
8:15 Jason Paling, Marx Navarro Castillo and Justin Lowry—Underwater
Archaeological Survey of Freshwater Lagoons in the Lacanja Basin, Chiapas,
Mexico
8:30 Kenichiro Tsukamoto, Fuyuki Tokanai and Toru Moriya—Building a High-
Resolution Chronology: A Case from the Maya Archaeological Site of El Palmar,
Mexico
8:45 William Ringle, Tomás Gallareta Negrón, Ken Seligson and David Vlcek—
Hidden in the Hills No Longer: LiDAR Coverage in the Puuc Region of Yucatan,
Mexico
9:00 Marisol Cortes-Rincon, Jonathan Roldan, Cady Rutherford, Byron Smith and
Walter Tovar Saldana—Utilization and Field Testing of LiDAR in the Maya
Hinterlands
9:15 Stanislava Romih and Rafael Guerra—Unleashing the Beast: New
Methodologies in Exploring Peri-abandonment Deposits in the Maya Lowlands
Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 45
Thursday Morning, April 12
9:30 Santiago Juarez—The Creation of Late Preclassic Urban Landscapes at the site
of Noh K’uh in Chiapas, Mexico
9:45 Erin Thornton, Richard Hansen and Edgar Suyuc-Ley—Ancient Maya Diet,
Environment, Animal Use and Exchange at El Mirador: The Zooarchaeological
Evidence
10:00 Richard Paine, Richard Hansen, Carlos Morales-Aguilar and Kevin Johnston—
Issues Reconstructing the Ancient Population of El Mirador, Guatemala
[20] GENERAL SESSION RESEARCH FROM OCEANIA AND THE AUSTRALIAN CONTINENT
Room: Maryland C
Time: 8:00 AM–10:15 AM
Chair: Thegn Ladefoged
Participants:
8:00 Katherine Woo—Shifting Palaeoeconomies at the Rockshelter Site Madjedbebe,
Australia
8:15 Justin Cramb—Manihiki & Rakahanga: Archaeological Research on a Dual-Atoll
Cluster in East Polynesia
8:30 Reno Nims—Little Ice Age Impacts on Traditional Māori Fisheries: Preliminary
Results from North Island, New Zealand
8:45 Thegn Ladefoged, Dion O’Neale, Alex Jorgensen, Christopher Stevenson and
Mark McCoy—The Dynamics of Māori Socio-political Interaction: Social Network
Analyses of Obsidian Circulation in Northland Aotearoa
9:00 Annette Oertle—Thermal Processes on Tropical Archaeological Shell: An
Experimental Study
9:15 Summer Moore—Continuity and Change in Early Colonial-Era Hawai‘i: An
Examination of Foreign Artifacts from Nu‘alolo Kai, Kaua‘i Island
9:30 Nick Belluzzo—“The Other Half of the Sky”: Competitive Anarchy in Contact-Era
Palau
46 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Thursday Morning, April 12
9:45 Anne Ford—Meet the Neighbours: Evidence for Interaction between the
Austronesian Lapita Culture and Non-Austronesian Communities in Papua New
Guinea
10:00 Rona Ikehara-Quebral, Michael Pietrusewsky and Michele Toomay Douglas—
Cranial Vault Modification in the Mariana Islands
[24] GENERAL SESSION EAST ASIA: THE PROTOHISTORIC AND HISTORIC PERIODS
Room: Maryland B
Time: 8:00 AM–10:30 AM
Chair: Wen Yin Cheng
Participants:
8:00 WengCheong Lam—Early Globalization of the Han Empire in Its Southern
Frontier and the Expansion of Iron Economic Network
8:15 Wen Yin Cheng and Chen Shen—Two Mould Types for All the Vessels:
Correlating Casting Mould Forms to the Vessel Forms Produced during the
Shang Dynasty
8:30 Alex Sweeney, Kara Bridgman Sweeney, Naoki Higa, Takumi Kishimoto and
Naho Ishiki—Sustainability and Tradition in Anindo Village, Okinawa, Japan
48 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Thursday Morning, April 12
8:15 Jeremy Skeens—Sifting through the Sherds: An In-Depth Look at the Ceramic
Assemblage from Woodpecker Cave (13JH202)
8:30 Angela Cooper—Mounds, Museum Visitors, and You (the Archaeologist)
8:45 Robert Jeske and Katherine Sterner—Early Oneota Longhouses in
Southeastern Wisconsin
9:00 Christina Friberg—Think Locally, Act Globally: How a Local Perspective Informs
the Broader Narrative of Mississippianization in the American Midwest
9:15 Richard Edwards and Robert Jeske—Maize’s Role in the Diets of Late
Prehistoric People Living in the Prairie Peninsula
9:30 Jeffery Kruchten—Thunder, Lightning, Wind, and Rain: Exploring Engagements
with Elemental Entities in the Closing of Emerald
9:45 David Pollack and A. Gwynn Henderson—The Middle Ohio Valley Fort Ancient
Transformation as Viewed from Fox Farm
10:00 Marcus Schulenburg—Building Village Communities: Early Fort Ancient Villages
in the Ohio Valley
10:15 Andrea Alveshere—Burning Down the House: Evidence for Controlled and
Uncontrolled Structure Fires among the Late Woodland and Mississippian
Settlements at the Orendorf Site in Fulton County, Illinois
10:30 Andrew Upton—Conflict, Migration, and the Transformation of Network
Interrelationships in Mississippian West-Central Illinois: A Multilayer Social
Network Analysis
9:45 Jess Beck, Colin Quinn and Horia Ciugudean—From Mounds and Museums:
Building a Bioarchaeology of the Early Bronze Age in the Apuseni Region of
Transylvania
10:00 Elizabeth Colantoni, Gabriele Colantoni, Serena Cosentino, Maria Rosa Lucidi
and Gianfranco Mieli—The Copper Age in Apennine Central Italy and the San
Martino Site at Torano di Borgorose (Rieti, Italy)
10:15 Derek Hamilton, Kerry Sayle, Colin Haselgrove and Gordon Cook—Application
of Multi-Isotopic Analysis (δ13C, δ15N, and δ34S) to Examine Mobility and
Movement of People and Animals within an Iron Age British Society
10:30 Eric Harkleroad—New Perspectives on Warfare in the Iron Age of Wessex
10:45 Deniz Kaya—Burning the House: The Importance of Excavation Methods in the
Study of Space and Place in the Neolithic Household. A Case Study from
Neolithic Bulgaria (6500–600 BC)
8:15 Christopher Wolff and Donald Holly—Colonizing the Edge: The Maritime Archaic
Settlement and Occupation of Eastern Newfoundland
8:30 Jessica Watson—Martha’s Vineyard Beach Economy: Scavenged Seals and
Washed-up Whales at the Frisby Butler Site
8:45 Brittany Mistretta and Jonathan Hanna—Breadth of Fresh Air: A Continued
Examination of the Reversed “Crab-Shell Dichotomy” in Grenada’s Pre-History
9:00 Georgia Andreou—Coastal Erosion Management in Archaeology: Turning
Challenges into Opportunities
9:15 Todd Koetje—Leukoma Seasonality and Maturity at WH-55, Implications for the
Lacarno Beach Phase in the Pacific Northwest
9:30 Thaddeus Bissett, Martin Walker, Sean Taylor and Michael Russo—The Utility
of Public LiDAR Data for Detecting and Documenting Low-Relief Archaeological
Sites: A Case Study from the Pockoy Island Shell Rings, Charleston County,
South Carolina
9:45 Christian K. Madsen, Jette Arneborg, Ian Simpson, Michael Nielsen and
Cameron Turley—(Almost) Making It in the Margins: Medieval Norse Adaptation
to the Arctic Fjord Environments
10:00 Marisa Afonso—Chronological Investigations at Coastal Shell Mounds,
Southeastern Brazil
10:15 Christopher Troskosky, Erika Ruhl, Sarah E. Hoffman, Torill Christine Lindstrøm
and Ezra Zubrow—A Small Rock Holding Back the Waves
10:30 Carola Flores-Fernandez, Veronica Alcalde, Laura Olguin, Jimena Torres and
Diego Salazar—Shell Fishhooks on C. chorus Mussel Shell (7500 to 4500 Years
BP) from the Atacama Desert Coast (Chile)
10:45 Seth Brewington—Fowling and Food Security in the Faroe Islands
11:00 Stephanie Ostrich—CITiZAN’s Digital Toolkit: Citizen Scientists Recording
England’s At-Risk Coastal Archaeology
10:00 Martin Walker and David Anderson—Examining the Subsistence and Social
Landscapes of the Late Precontact Occupations at the Topper Site (38AL23),
Allendale, South Carolina
10:15 William Marquardt, Victor Thompson, Karen Walker, Michael Savarese and Lee
Newsom—Cooperation and Coercion: Geography, Ecology, Climate, and
Surplus Production in the Rise of the Calusa Kingdom
10:30 Evan Mann—Conch, Whelk, or Clam: Comparing Southern Florida’s Indigenous
Shellfish Collection Patterns
10:45 Connie Randall, Meagan Dennison, Jay Franklin, Bruce Manzano and Renee
Walker—Woodland Subsistence in Upper East Tennessee
11:00 Nicholas Triozzi—Competing with the Crown: Early Spanish Mission Settlement
Decisions in a Human Behavioral Ecology Model
[38] GENERAL SESSION THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE GREAT BASIN AND CALIFORNIA
Room: Washington Room 4
Time: 8:00 AM–11:15 AM
Chair: Timothy Murphy
Participants:
8:00 Connor Johnen—A View from the Mountains: A Test of a Predictive Model in the
Southern Wind River Range, Wyoming
8:15 Michael Glassow—Seasonal Mobility Patterns During the Middle Holocene on
Santa Cruz Island, California
8:30 Carly Whelan—Obsidian Trade vs. Direct Acquisition: A View from Central
California
8:45 Rosemary Brother—From Features to Figures: Quantitative Analysis of
California Native American Baskets
9:00 Chester Liwosz—Stones and Standing Waves: Integrating Interpretation with
Emergent Methods in Petroglyph Studies
Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 57
Thursday Morning, April 12
9:15 Richard-Patrick Cromwell, Erin Herring, Chantel Saban and Brianna Kendrick—
Paleoecological Analysis Using Select Coprolites & Sediments Recovered from
Paisley Caves, Oregon
9:30 Michael Ligman, Tina Hart and Michael L.Terlep—Portable XRF Analysis of
Rock Art Pigments Used in Pictographs across the Great Basin
9:45 Herb Dallas—Revisiting CA-VEN-1 and Millingstone Culture Re-examined
10:00 William Jerrems—Pre-Clovis Evidence at Guano Mountain, Nevada
10:15 J. Guzman—Mapping Prehistoric Behavior Patterns at a Lithic Tool Stone
Source in the Colorado Desert: Results of Geospatial Analysis at CA-IMP-008/H
10:30 Stephanie Abo—Examining Fremont Snake Valley Black-on-gray Pottery
through Neutron Activation Analysis
10:45 Timothy Murphy—A GIS Analysis of Ancient Human Trails, Human Behavioral
Ecology, and Agency in the Mojave and Colorado Desert
11:00 Edward Stoner and Geoffrey Cunnar—The Pequop Projectile Point Type Site in
Goshute Valley, Northeastern Nevada and Implications for the Long and Short
Chronology Debate in the Great Basin
10:00 Kathryn Turney—Land and the Social Consequences of Land Loss: Navajo Oral
History, Ethnoarchaeology, and Spatial Analysis at Wupatki National Monument,
Arizona
10:15 William Auchter—Cell Towers: Where the Archaeology Is a Mile Wide and an
Inch Deep
10:30 Amilcar Vargas and Álvaro Brizuela Absalón—REAP in El Tajin: Looking
towards Social Participation in a World Heritage Site
10:45 Brian Ostahowski—Coastal Land Loss and the Future of Louisiana’s
Archaeological Record
11:00 Adrienne Velasquez—Treasure within the Fortress: Opportunities for
Partnership in DoD Archaeology
11:15 Pedro Espinoza—El Continuum cultural, una nueva estrategia de investigación
y gestión del patrimonio arqueológico en Lima, Perú
11:30 Kasey Diserens Morgan—Navigating Narratives of the Past in the Present:
Archaeology and Heritage Preservation in Tihosuco, Quintana Roo, Mexico
11:45 Marieka Arksey, Paddington Hodza and Greg Pierce—WyoARCH: Increasing
the Impact of Archaeological Repositories through Spatially-Enabled Collections
Management
[45] GENERAL SESSION EAST ASIA: THE JOMON AND NEOLITHIC PERIODS
Room: Delaware A
Time: 10:30 AM–12:00 PM
Chair: Bong Kang
Participants:
10:30 Takashi Sakaguchi—Regional Sociopolitical Transformations among Complex
Hunter-Gatherers: A Macroregional Approach to the Late Jomon of Central
Hokkaido
10:45 Zhuang Lina, Lin Liugen and Gan Huiyuan—Ground Stone Tools from the
Hanjing and Shunshanji Sites
11:00 Xiangming Dai—An Analysis on the Taosi Cemetery from the Late Neolithic in
North-central China
11:15 Minmin Ma, Lele Ren and Xin Li—The Study of Isotopic Baseline in the Gan-
Qing Region, Northwestern China
11:30 Xiaotong Wu, Xingxiang Zhang, Zhengyao Jin, Rowan Flad and Xinming Xue—
Long-Distance Human Migration in Late Neolithic China: Isotopic Evidence from
Qingliangsi Cemetery
11:45 Bong Kang—The Rock Art of Bangudae in Southern Korea: Focused on the
Problems of Whale Hunting
Participants:
10:30 Jose-Luis Sagripanti, Dan Wise, Ralph A. Anthenien Jr., Elias Yoon and
Christopher Kleihege—High Energy Generation and Elevated Temperature
Potential of an Archaic Furnace in Ancient Peru
10:45 Maria Soledad Solorzano Venegas and Olga del Pilar Woolfson Touma—
Proceso Constructivo en los Montículos Circulares Prehispánicos de Urcuquí /
Constructive Process at Prehispanic Circular Mounds of Urcuquí
11:00 Sebastian Warmlander—Three Case Studies of Andean Metalworking
11:15 Jo Osborn, Camille Weinberg and Kelita Pérez Cubas—Revisiting Jahuay: An
Early Horizon Maritime Site at the Topará Quebrada on the South Coast of Peru
11:30 Richard Burger, Lucy Salazar and Michael D. Glascock—New Evidence of Inca
Ceramic Production and Exchange in the Cuzco Heartland
11:45 German Loffler—Digital Standardization of Ceramic Nomenclature: A Case for
Central Coast Peruvian Pottery Forms during the Late Intermediate Period
51-d Jillian Galle, Lindsay Bloch, Jeffrey Ferguson, Fraser Neiman and Suzanne
Francis Brown— Ceramic Manufacturing and Distribution Networks in Early
Jamaica: Interpretive Implications of LA-ICP-MS and NAA Analyses on Coarse
Earthenwares from 18th-Century Plantation Contexts
Keith M. Prufer—Early Human Biology, Ecology, and Archaeology in the Lowland Tropics
of Central America
Guadalupe Sanchez Miranda—Pleistocene and Holocene People of Sonora
Luis Morett Alatorre—El Sitio Arcaico Temprano de las Estacas (Morelos) y Su Tecnología
de Hogares
Arthur Joyce—Sourcing Preceramic obsidian from Las Estacas, Morelos, and Yuzanu 36,
Oaxaca
Jon Lohse—Yuzanu 50, An Early Paleoindian Site in the Mixteca Alta
David Yelacic—Formation and Context of Sitio Chivacabe, Western Highland Guatemala
Guillermo Acosta-Ochoa—Preceramic Cultures of the Basin of Mexico
Silvia Gonzalez—Paleoindian Sites from Central Mexico: Paleoenvironment and Dating
Brigitte Faugère—Paleoindian and Archaic in North Centre and Western Mexico
Kenneth Hirth—The Esperanza to Middle Marcala Phase Subsistence Practices at El
Gigante Rockshelter (11,000–7400 cal B.P.)
Barbara Voorhies—Archaic Period Lifeways on the South Pacific Coast of Mexico
Marcus Winter—Preceramic Occupations in the Valley of Oaxaca and the Southern
Isthmus
1:30 Ana Mauricio—Los Morteros and Pampa de las Salinas: Early Monumentality
and Environmental Change in Preceramic Peru
1:45 Matthew Piscitelli—The Extraordinary Case of the Late Preceramic Norte Chico
2:00 Bob Benfer—Late Preceramic Peruvian Effigy Mound Imagery
2:15 é Sara and Eisei Tsurumi—Renovation of Temples during the Kotosh Mito
Phase: 2016 Excavations at Kotosh, Huanuco, Peru
2:30 Jose Narvaez—Archaeological Investigations in El Paraíso. A Late Preceramic
Architectural Complex in Lima – Peru
2:45 Ari Caramanica—Reconstructing the Environmental History of El Paraíso,
Chillón Valley
3:00 Jeffrey Quilter—Discussant
1:45 Michael Searcy, Scott Ure, Michael Mathiowetz, Jaclyn Eckersley and Haylie
Ferguson—Aerial Imaging Using UAVs (Drones) in Chihuahua and Nayarit,
Mexico, to Map and Archive Archaeological Sites
2:00 Brady Liss, Matthew Howland and Thomas E. Levy—Testing Google Earth
Engine for Remote Sensing in Archaeology: Case Studies from Faynan, Jordan
2:15 Benjamin Vining and Hali Thurber—Detecting el Niño’s Disasters: Remote
Sensing of Recent ENSO Events in Northern Peru and Implications for
Prehispanic Societies
2:30 Corey Hoover and Patrick Mullins—Exploring Classification Methods for Drone
Based Imagery on the Peruvian North Coast
2:45 Jesse Casana, Austin Chad Hill and Elise Jakoby Laugier—Drone-Acquired
Thermal and Multispectral Imagery as a Tool in Archaeological Prospection
3:00 William Whitehead—Using Drones for Exploring the Links between Vegetation
and Traditional Archaeological Survey: An Example from Arizona
3:15 Abel Traslaviña, James Zimmer-Dauphinee and Steven A. Wernke—Historical
Photogrammetry: Bringing a New Dimension to Historic Landscape
Reconstruction
[71] GENERAL SESSION SOUTHWEST ASIA: BRONZE, IRON AND HISTORIC PERIODS
Room: McKinley
Time: 1:00 PM–3:30 PM
Chair: Uri Berger
Participants:
1:00 Seth Price—Abu Shusha: Integrating and Correlating Surface Features with
Magnetic Susceptibility
1:15 Mehrnoush Soroush, Alireza Mehrtash and Emad Khazraee—Automated Qanat
Detection: Examining the Application of Deep-Learning in Archaeological
Remote Sensing
1:30 Uri Berger and Gonen Sharon—An Israeli (real COOL) Dolmen
1:45 Katheryn Twiss, Melina Seabrook and Michael Charles—Plant and Animal
Remains from Old Babylonian Ur
2:00 Mitra Panahipour—Patterns of Land-Use and Political Administration beyond the
Core Areas of the Sasanian Empire
2:15 Karim Alizadeh—Climate Change or Muslims? Collapse of the Late Antique
Sasanian Settlements, Mughan Steppe, Iranian Azerbaijan
2:30 Sarah MacIntosh, Levent Atici and Sachihiro Omura—Assessing the Correlation
between Bone Artifacts and Body Part Profiles: A Case Study from the Central
Anatolian Site of Kaman-Kalehöyük
2:45 Paige Paulsen—Geospatial Analysis of Tumuli in the North Central Anatolian
Plateau
3:00 Bulent Arikan—Modeling the Changes in the Surface Processes at Arslantepe
(Malatya) during the Early Bronze Age-I (ca. 5000–4750 cal. BP)
3:15 Gonca Dardeniz Arikan and Tayfun Yildirim—Metal and Vitreous Production
Technologies at the Early Bronze Age Resuloğlu (Central Anatolia, Turkey)
74 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Thursday Afternoon, April 12
[76] SYMPOSIUM EMERGING FROM THE SHADOW OF THE CEIBA: RECENT RESEARCH IN
MAYA PALEOETHNOBOTANY
Room: Maryland B
Time: 1:00 PM–3:45 PM
Chairs: Jessica Devio and Mario Zimmermann
Participants:
1:00 Mario Zimmermann—Examining the Bread-Basket Model: Puuc Intra and Inter-
site Diversity in Plant Foods
1:15 Scott Fedick, Gerald Islebe and Louis Santiago—Exploring the Edible Forest:
Food Values and Archaeological Visibility of Indigenous Food Plants of the Maya
Lowlands
1:30 Jessica Devio—Assessing Botanical Diversity of Late-to-Terminal Classic
Households at Xunantunich, Belize
1:45 Anarrubenia Capellin Ortega—Investigating Ancient Maya Foodways in the
Copan Valley, Honduras: Macrobotanical Analysis from Late Classic to
Postclassic Middens in the Rio Amarillo East Pocket
2:00 David L. Lentz, Nicholas Dunning and Vernon Scarborough—Agriculture, Land
Management and Expressions of Elite Control at the Ancient Maya City of Tikal
2:15 Sebastian Salgado-Flores—Prey Choice and Politics: Modelling Postclassic
Maya Wood Selection at La Punta, Chiapas, Mexico
2:30 Rebecca Friedel and M. Kathryn Brown—Communing with the Gods: The
Paleoethnobotany of Fire Rituals
2:45 Cameron L. McNeil—Capturing the Fragrance of Ancient Copan Rituals: Floral
Remains from Maya Tombs and Temples
3:00 Mallory Melton—Towards a Social Paleoethnobotany of Urbanization: Integrating
Macrobotanical and Microbotanical Data to Explore Foodways at La Blanca,
Guatemala
3:15 Shanti Morell-Hart—Discussant
3:30 Questions and Answers
2:00 Karine Tache and Roland Tremblay—A Taste for Fish among the Saint
Lawrence Iroquoians of the Montreal Region
2:15 Mia Carey—Artifacts Addicts Anonymous: The Road to Recovery from Negative
Data
2:30 Robert H. Tykot and Andrea Vianello—Prehistoric Obsidian Use in Southern
Italy: Primary Acquisition and Down-the-Line Exchange in Calabria, Basilicata,
and Campania
2:45 Nathaniel Kitchel and Heather Rockwell—Paleoindian Archaeology in the
Munsungun Lake Region: Beyond Norway Bluff
3:00 Michael Mlyniec, Roger Doonan, Duško Šljivar, Yvette Marks and Sarah
MacKinnon—Experimental Reconstructed Vinča Gradac Phase Copper Smelting
3:15 Timothy Dennehy, Christopher Merriman and Keith M. Prufer—Lithic
Technological Changes from the Paleoindian to the Late Archaic: A Pilot Study
3:30 Lee Drake—An Open-Source Calibration Framework for XRF
3:45 Zuzana Chovanec—The Organic Residue Analysis from the Early Bronze Age
Site of Sotira Kaminoudhia in Cyprus
Interpersonal Performance
2:15 Justin Reamer—Planting the Empty Spaces: Estimating Field Size from Storage
Pits in the Upper Delaware Valley
2:30 Sarah Kurnick—Political Authority and the Creation of Wilderness: American
National Parks and Mexican Eco-Archaeological Parks
2:45 Jean Larmon and Lisa Lucero—Cara Blanca Pool 6: Colonial Logging and the
Evolving Landscape
3:00 Britta Spaulding—Forgotten or Remembered? Rural-Urban Connections in the
Modern and in the Past
3:15 Alyssa Scott—Tuberculosis Sanatoriums: Historical Archaeology, Landscape,
and Identity
3:30 Noa Corcoran Tadd—Landscapes of Mobility in the South-Central Andes: From
Chiefly Networks to Colonial Markets (AD 1100–1800)
3:45 Jonathan Libbon, Karen Reed, Aidan McCarty, Erica Birkner and Seth Mitchell—
From the Hills of Appalachia to the Shores of Lake Erie: Landscape Archaeology
in Northern Ohio
4:00 Maria Rosa Iovino, Salvatore Chilardi, Güner Coskunsu, Anita Crispino and
Giuseppe Sabatino—Lithic Raw Material Procurement and Mobility in a
Geological Diversed Environmental Setting in Prehistoric Eastern Sicily
4:15 Amy Roache-Fedchenko—Spatial Modeling of 18th Century Blacksmith Shops
2:00 Yvette Marks and Roger Doonan—Copper Smelting in the Early Bronze Age
Aegean
2:15 Hilda Lozano Bravo, Jose Luis Ruvalcaba, Ana Maria Soler and Luis Barba—
Floors, an Archaeological Material: The Case of the Plaza de la Piramide del
Sol, Teotihuacan, Mexico
2:30 Kaoru Akoshima—Lithic Micro-wear Traces at Morphological Junctions: Function
vs. Typology Reconsidered in Terms of Technological Organizations
2:45 Brandi Lee MacDonald, David Stalla, Xiaoqing He and Tommi White—
Microanalytical Insights into Pigment Selection and Preparation in British
Columbia Rock Art
3:00 Katherine Sterner, Robert Ahlrichs, Dan Wendt and Larry Furo—Testing
Adaptive Efficiency: A Comparison of the Durability of Stone and Copper
Projectile Points
3:15 Nicole Bodenstein—Comparing a NextEngine 3D Scanner with Casting
Mediums for Making Positives of Cord-Impressed Pottery
3:30 Russell Skowronek, Brandi Reger, James Hinthorne and Juan Gonzalez—pXRF
Identification of Prehistoric Lithic Artifact Material, Resource Clusters along the
Lower Rio Grande
3:45 Theresa Emmerich Kamper—Hide Processing in Prehistory: An Experimental
Approach to Prehistoric Tanning Technologies
4:00 Naomi L. Martisius, Isabelle Sidéra, Teresa E. Steele, Shannon P. McPherron
and Ellen Schulz-Kornas—A New Methodology for Understanding How Bone
Wears Using 3D Surface Texture Analysis
4:15 Donna Ruhl—Isotopes & Curation: New Lessons Learned from Legacy
Waterlogged Wooden Artifacts
4:30 Scott Stull—Experimental Archaeology of Medieval Food as Participant
Observation
[90] SYMPOSIUM DISCS, FISH, SQUIRRELS AND SCAT: PAPERS IN HONOR OF WALTER
KLIPPEL
Room: Lincoln 6
Time: 1:00 PM–5:00 PM
Chairs: Meagan Dennison, Jennifer Green and Samantha Upton
Participants:
1:00 Andrew Bradbury and Philip Carr—Flintknapping Experiments and Middle-
Range Theory
1:15 Terry Ferguson, Andrew Ivester and Christopher Moore—A Geoarchaeological
Investigation of Site Formation Processes and Late Pleistocene and Holocene
Environmental Change at the Foxwood Farm Site (38PN35)
1:30 Jodi Jacobson—Broken Bones: Taphonomy vs Cultural Modification in North
and Central Texas
1:45 Joanne Devlin, Lee Jantz and Michelle Hamilton—Beyond the Farm: Forensic
Taphonomy in East Tennessee
2:00 Jennifer Synstelien and Heli Maijanen—Bone Modification by the American
Cockroach
2:15 Jack Hofman and Barbara Crable—Cultural, Taphonomic, and Biogeographic
Considerations of Black Footed Ferret at the Burntwood Creek Bison Kill Site,
Central High Plains, USA
2:30 Kenneth Cannon—Ecology of Bison in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
2:45 Bruce Manzano, Thomas Royster, Bernard Means, George Crothers and Robert
Selden Jr.—Faunal Identification Using 3D Scanning
3:00 Jan Simek and Alan Cressler—Sacred Animal Images in Precontact
Southeastern Rock Art
86 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Thursday Afternoon, April 12
3:15 Haskel Greenfield, Justin Lev-Tov, Ann Killebrew and Annie Brown—Sacrificing
and Eating Dogs in the Ancient Eastern Mediterranean World
3:30 Timothy Baumann, Charles Faulkner and Heather Woods—The Diet and Identity
of Enslaved African Americans in the Upper South
3:45 Sean Coughlin and Kelly Sellers Wittie—Feeding New Orleans: Where’s The
Pork?
4:00 Judith Sichler—Provisioned and Caught: Historic Perspectives on Diet in the
Danish West Indies
4:15 Gerald Schroedl, Callie Bennett, Ann Ramsey and Todd Ahlman—Historical and
Archaeological Contexts for Zooarchaeological Analyses at Brimstone Hill
Fortress, St. Kitts, West Indies
4:30 Bonnie Styles—Discussant
4:45 R. McMillan—Discussant
93-e Mauricio Cuevas and Lourdes Budar—Agua dulce, Agua salada. Diferenciación
de actividades pesqueras en el sistema portuario de la costa este de Los Tuxtlas
93-f Marimar Becerra Alvarez—Paisajes aprovechados y causes modificados en el
sistema portuario de la costa este de Los Tuxtlas, Veracruz
95-f John Lawrence, Cathy Costin, Kathleen Marsaglia, Michael Love and Hector
Neff—Petrography, Production, and Provenance of Ceramics from La Blanca,
Guatemala
95-g Anabel Ford, Linda Howie and Josh Inga—Recipe for Daub? A Comparative
Petrographic Study of a Common Construction Component in the Maya Area
95-h Linda Howie, Jillian Jordan and Heather McKillop—Mineralogy without Minerals:
A Proposed Methodology for Reconstructing the Original Compositions of Highly
Altered Ceramic Bodies Using Thin Section Petrography
95-i Francisco Sanchez-Tornero—The Use of White Engobe in the Formative
Ceramics in Ojo de Agua Spring from San Antonio La Isla, Toluca Valley, Mexico
95-j Veronica Acevedo—Tecnología cerámica, análisis petrográfico y técnicas
arqueometricas en cerámicas policromas de las fronteras de Quebrada de
Humahuaca, Jujuy, Argentina
95-k C. Trevor Duke, Neill Wallis and Ann Cordell—Mortuary Spaces as Social
Power: Ceramic Exchange and Burial Practice at Safford Mound (8PI3)
95-l Ann Cordell, Neill Wallis and Thomas Pluckhahn—Ceramic Petrography of
Woodland Period Swift Creek Complicated Stamped Pottery in Florida and the
Lower Southeastern United States
95-m Zackary Gilmore and Kenneth Sassaman—Clay Resource Variability and
Stallings Pottery Provenance along the Savannah and Ogeechee Rivers
95-n Daniel Ionico—The Recipes of Disaster in Northern Iroquoia: Integrating Digital
Image Analysis into Petrographic Practice
95-o Sarah Striker—Applications of Microscopy and Thin Section Petrography in
Iroquoian Ceramic Analysis
95-p Vince Van Thienen—Rethinking Migration and Mobility in the Late Roman West
with Ceramic Petrography
[96] FORUM BEARS EARS, THE ANTIQUITIES ACT, AND THE STATUS OF OUR NATIONAL
MONUMENTS
(SAA President-Sponsored Session)
Room: Marriott Salon 2
Time: 3:00 PM–5:00 PM
Moderator: William Doelle
Participants:
Francis McManamon—Discussant
Bruce Babbitt—Discussant
Carleton Bowekaty—Discussant
Willie Grayeyes—Discussant
Josh Ewing—Discussant
Barbara Pahl—Discussant
Lyle Balenquah—Discussant
William Lipe—Discussant
R. E. Burrillo—Discussant
Benjamin Bellorado—Discussant
90 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Thursday Afternoon, April 12
[101] POSTER SESSION A BEER IN THE HAND IS BETTER WITH AN OCULUS RIFT ON THE
FACE: A MULTIMEDIA “POSTERS AFTER-HOURS” SESSION FEATURING HANDS-ON
INTERACTIVE STATIONS AND IMMERSIVE VIRTUAL REALITY TECHNOLOGIES
(Sponsored by SAA Digital Data Interest Group [DDIG])
Room: Exhibit Hall B South
Time: 5:00 PM–7:00 PM
Chairs: Cameron S. Griffith and Joshua J. Wells
Participants:
101-a Gabriel Wrobel—The Maya Cranial Photogrammetry Project
101-b Guy Duke, Sarah Rowe and Brandi Reger—Figuring Things Out: 3D Models of
Valdivia Figurines for Research and Outreach
101-c Andrés Mejía Ramón, Christian John, Jessica Munson and Christopher
Morehart—Repurposing Scale in Three Mesoamerican Centers: Landscape
Archaeology and High-Resolution 3D Modeling at Teotihuacan, Altar de
Sacrificios, and Los Mogotes
101-d Kelsey Sullivan, Britton L. Shepardson, Mario Tuki, Paula Valenzuela Contreras
and Francisco Torres Hochstetter—Education, Conservation, and Research on
Easter Island through Three-Dimensional Photogrammetry
Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 93
Thursday Evening, April 12
101-e Cameron S. Griffith—3D Scanning the Virgin Mary in the Toast: Using Handheld
Digital Imaging Technologies to Explode the Myth of Pareidolic Illusions in the
Ancient Maya Underworld
101-f Laura Scheiber and Kirsten Hawley—A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Words:
Reading the Past and (Digital) Interpretation in the 21st Century, a Case Study
from the Bighorn Basin, Wyoming
101-g Jiawei Huang, Claire Ebert, Jan Oliver Wallgrün, Jaime Awe and Alexander
Klippel—Immersive Augmented and Virtual Reality for Archeological Sites
Exploration and Analysis
101-h Alexander Nyers, Loren Davis and Danial Bean—How Good Are My Scans? A
Quick Primer on 3D Scan Quality Control and Metadata Recordation
101-i Stephen Yerka and Russell Townsend—Big Picture, Little Picture:
Reconstructing Rock Art and Context in Both the Virtual and Physical Word
103-b Rachel Burger, Ian Jorgeson and Michael Aiuvalasit—Raising a Rafter: A Cost-
Benefit Analysis of Ancestral Pueblo Intensification of Turkey Husbandry in the
Northern Rio Grande Region, New Mexico
103-c Paul Burnett—Bears Ears Archaeological Probability Models
103-d David Carlson, Michael Waters and Joshua Keene—Intrasite Spatial Analysis at
the Debra L. Friedkin Site, TX
103-e Jacob Harris, Curtis Marean, Kiona Ogle and Jessica Thompson—Employing
Bayesian Probability Theory to Diverse Applications Relevant to Archaeology
103-f Matthew Harris—A Site Is Not a Centroid: Modeling Archaeological Landforms
and Uncertainty with Bayesian Distribution Regression
103-g Christopher Lanza, Amanuel Beyin and Erik R. Otárola-Castillo—Which Way Did
They Go? Using Individual-Based Models to Identify Out of Africa Hominin
Dispersal Routes
103-h Ben Marwick and Erik Gjesfjeld—Modelling the Innovation and Extinction of
Archaeological Ideas
103-i Erik R. Otárola-Castillo—Ghosts of Climates Past: Evaluating the Effects of
Climate Change on the Foraging Ecology of Paleoindian Hunter-Gatherers in the
North American Great Plains
103-j Max Price—Tracking Morphological Changes in the Domestication of Sheep and
Pigs: A Comparison
103-k John Rapes, Jesse Wolfhagen, Max Price and Erik R. Otárola-Castillo —
ZooaRchGUI: A User-Friendly Graphical User Interface with the R-Programming
Language for Archaeologists
103-l Michael Shott and Erik R. Otárola-Castillo—Parts of a Whole: Reduction
Allometry and Modularity in Experimental Folsom Points
103-m Melissa Torquato—Why Do We Farm?: Risk Assessment of the Foraging
Farming Transition in North America
103-n Jesse Wolfhagen—Zooarchaeological Survivorship Models Using Ordered
Logistic Regression
Chelsea Blackmore—Racial Justice Matters: White Privilege and the Spectre of Scientific
Objectivity
Anne Pyburn—The Postclassic, the Postmodern, and the Problem of Alternative Facts
Anna Novotny—Is It Christmas Yet? Teaching Evolution to a Resistant Public
Chuck Riggs—Indigenizing Archaeology in the 21st Century
Allison Cuneo—Broken Minarets and Lamassu: The Propogandization of Heritage on the
Front Line of the War in Northern Iraq
7:45 Marian Hamilton, Cyler Conrad, Patricia Crown, Wirt Wills and Emily Lena
Jones—Carbon, Nitrogen, and Oxygen Stable Isotope Ratios from Room 28
Lagomorphs
8:00 Susan Smith and Karen Adams—Plant Tales from Pueblo Bonito, Room 28
8:15 Barbara Mills—Discussant
7:45 J. Scott Jones and Mark Norton—Paleoindian Site Formation in the Tennessee
River Valley
8:00 Lauren Woelkers and Jay Franklin—First Foragers on the Upper Cumberland
Plateau of Tennessee: Transitional Late Pleistocene and Early Holocene Lithic
Technology at Rock Creek Mortar Shelter (40Pt209)
8:15 Greg Maggard and Kary Stackelbeck—Late Pleistocene Aggregation Sites on
the Peruvian North Coast: A New Look at Paiján Settlement
8:30 Sarah Meinekat, Christopher Miller and Kurt Rademaker—A Geoarchaeological
Approach to Site Formation and Structures of Inter-zonal Paleoindian Sites in
Southern Peru
8:45 Edward Koole—Paleo-Indian Evidence from Rock Shelters of the Pains Region,
Southeastern Brazil: Typology, Technology and Chronology of the Lithic Material
and Its Classification in Three Horizons
9:00 D. Shane Miller—Discussant
6:15 M. Kathryn Brown and Jason Yaeger—The Shifting Political Landscape of the
Mopan Valley: A Diachronic Perspective
6:30 Thomas Jamison and David Mixter—Public Architecture and Space at Actuncan
6:45 Angela Keller—The View from Below: Plaza Spaces at Actuncan, Belize
7:00 Kara A. Fulton, David Mixter and Borislava Simova—Residential Trajectories of
Commoner, Elite, and Noble Spaces at Actuncan, Belize
7:15 Carolyn Freiwald, Kara A. Fulton, Nicholas Billstrand and Destiny Micklin—
Making an Ancestor at Actuncan: Exploring the Origins, Health, Burial Treatment
and Taphonomy of a Late Classic Maya Residential Eastern Structure
7:30 Borislava Simova—Negotiations in the Ritual and Social Landscape of Actuncan,
Belize
7:45 E. Christian Wells, Kara A. Fulton, David Mixter and Borislava Simova—The
View from the Ground: How Geochemistry Informs Our Understanding of the
Regal, Ritual, and Residential Character of Actuncan
8:00 Theresa Heindel—Ancient Maya Land Use: Water Management and Agricultural
Production at Actuncan, Belize
8:15 John Blitz and Lisa LeCount—Groundstone Manos and Metates as a Measure of
Ancient Maya Political Economy at Actuncan, Belize
8:30 David Mixter—Urban Reworking as Political Action at the Ancient Maya City of
Actuncan, Belize
8:45 Olivia Navarro-Farr—Discussant
9:00 David Carballo—Discussant
[132] SYMPOSIUM ARE WE INKAS? INKAS AND LOCAL POLITIES INTERACTIONS AS SEEN
THROUGH THE M ATERIAL CULTURE
Room: Delaware A
Time: 6:00 PM–9:30 PM
Chairs: Alejandro Chu and Luisa Esther Diaz Arriola
Participants:
6:00 Gary Urton—The Tension between Standardization and Regionalism in Cord-
Keeping in Tawantinsuyu
6:15 Florencio Delgado Espinoza—Interaction and Resistance against the Inka on the
Land of the Cañaris, Southern Ecuador
6:30 Ronald Lippi, Alejandra Gudiño, Estanislao Pazmiño and Esteban Acosta—
Incas and Yumbos at Palmitopamba, Tulipe and Other Notable Sites on the
Northwestern Periphery of Tawantinsuyo
110 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Thursday Evening, April 12
Participants:
6:00 David Anderson, Thaddeus Bissett, Stephen Yerka, Joshua J. Wells and Eric
Kansa—Drowning the Library: Sea-Level Rise and Archaeological Site
Destruction in the Southeastern United States
6:15 Stephen Dockrill and Julie Bond—Swandro, Rousay, Orkney: Between Sea and
Land
6:30 Amy Ollendorf, Chad Donnelly, Brady Woodard and Kyle Volk—Mitigation and
Management in the Context of Climate Change at Three Historic Properties on
the Great Plains, USA
6:45 Ramona Harrison—Saving Siglunes from the Sea
7:00 Anne Jensen—Salvaging Heritage and Data from Walakpa: A Case Study of the
Walakpa Archaeological Salvage Project (WASP)
7:15 Isabel Rivera-Collazo—Coastal Erosion and Extreme Atmospheric Events:
Climate Change and Coastal Cultural Heritage in Puerto Rico
7:30 Vibeke Vandrup Martens and Michel Vorenhout—The Follo Railroad
Environmental Monitoring Project in Medieval Oslo, Norway
7:45 Ani St. Amand, Alice R. Kelley and Daniel H. Sandweiss—Assessing Destruction
Risk of Cultural Resources: Primary and Secondary Impacts of Climate Change
on the Archaeological Record
8:00 Konrad Smiarowski, Christian K. Madsen and Michael Nielsen—From Medieval
Wool Tunics to Bone Powder: Rapid Degradation of Norse Middens in
Southwest Greenland
8:15 Hans Harmsen, Jørgen Hollesen, Henning Matthiesen, Bo Eberling and
Christian K. Madsen—Climate Change and the Rapid Loss of Organic Deposits
in West Greenland
8:30 Alice R. Kelley, Jacquelynn Miller, Joseph T. Kelley, Arthur Spiess and Daniel
Belknap—Burning Libraries and Drowning Archives: Shell Middens on the Maine
Coast
8:45 Karen Walker, Jennifer Haney, William Marquardt, Rachael Kangas and Sara
Ayers-Rigsby—Archaeological Shoreline Monitoring in a Climate-Changing SW
Florida: The Case of a Rapidly Eroding, Rare, Late-Archaic Shell Midden at
Calusa Island
9:00 Sandra Pentney and Stephen Bourne—Using the City Simulator Tool to Aid in
Preservation during Resiliency Planning
9:15 Ruth Maher and Jane Downes—Sustainable Heritage through Community
Engagement and Education
9:30 Rachael Kangas and Sarah Miller—Heritage Monitoring Scouts (HMS) Florida:
Pragmatic Responses to Heritage at Risk
9:00 Nathan Wales, Kristen Gremillion, Bruce D. Smith, Melis Akman and Benjamin
K. Blackman—The Future of Paleogenomics in Archaeology: Insights from a
Multidisciplinary Study on Sunflower Domestication
9:15 Chris Hunt, Evan Hill, Paula Reimer and Graeme Barker—Radiocarbon Dating
of Land Snail Shell and the Chronology of MSA-Neolithic Human Activity in the
Haua Fteah, Libya
9:30 Nicole Boivin—Discussant
9:45 David Thomas—Discussant
6:45 Andrew Zipkin, Stanley Ambrose, Gideon Bartov, Alexander Taylor and Mercy
Gakii—Ethno-archaeometry of Ochre Mineral Pigment Extraction, Transport, and
Use in the Kenya Rift Valley
7:00 Rachel Horowitz—Chert Extraction and Production in Resource-Rich Regions:
Chert Economies among the Late Classic Maya of Western Belize
7:15 Kristen Fuld and Terry Ozbun—Cultural Landscapes of Glass Buttes, Oregon
7:30 Jeanne Binning—Prehistoric Tool Stone Acquisition and Use in the Central
Mojave Desert
7:45 Ron Adams—Examining Patterns of Toolstone Procurement in an Edible Lithic
Landscape on the Columbia Plateau
8:00 Questions and Answers
8:15 Terry Ozbun—Estimating Orthoquartzite Quarry Production on the Llano
Estacado
8:30 Douglas MacDonald—Cougar Creek Obsidian: Quarry Activity and Secondary
Processing of a Minor Yellowstone Obsidian
8:45 Anne S. Dowd—Sacred Stone, Sacred Land: A Traditional Native American
Quarry Cultural Landscape
9:00 Stance Hurst, Ricardo Chacon, Eileen Johnson and Doug Cunningham—Lithic
Technology of Manufacturing Stone Tools at Gravel Quarry Source Locations
Using Heat-Treatment
9:15 Ryan Parish and Brad Koldehoff—Documenting the Crescent Hills Quarry
Complex, Missouri
9:30 Greg Hendryx, Joost Morsink and Charlotte Pevny—From Quarry to Mine:
Citronelle Gravel Extraction in Southwest Mississippi
9:45 Victor Serrano—In the Hunt for Mona Island Guano Miners: Archival
Documentation in the General Archives of Puerto Rico
8:00 Estefanía Vidal-Montero, Itací Correa, Liz Vilches, Francisco Gallardo and
Mauricio Uribe—Technologies of Clay: Pottery, Architecture, and the
Transformation of Mud in the Atacama Desert (South-Central Andes)
8:15 Nicola Sharratt—Tradition and Transformation during the Middle Horizon to LIP
Transition: Visual and Compositional Analyses of Tumilaca and Estuquiña
Pottery in the Moquegua Valley, Peru
8:30 Kayeleigh Sharp—Beneath the Surface: Steps toward Resolving Gallinazo-
Mochica Debates in Peru’s Northern North Coast
8:45 Miriam Domínguez—Renderings of Knowledge and History in the Jubones River
Basin: Neutron Activation Analyses and Petrography in the Ceramics of Potrero
Mendieta (ca. 1,000 BCE)
9:00 Benjamin Carter—Making Bead Makers: Durability and Change in a Community
of Practice among the Manteño-Guancavilca of Ecuador
9:15 Maria Masucci—Pottery Rituals and Ritual Pottery: Ceramic Production, Use,
and Disposal among the Guancavilca of Coastal Ecuador (AD 800–1532)
9:30 María Inés Velarde and Pamela Castro de la Mata—Produccion metalurgica en
la Costa Sur: de Paracas a Nasca
9:45 Izumi Shimada—Discussant
[146] GENERAL SESSION PROTOHISTORIC AND HISTORIC RESEARCH FROM AROUND THE
MEDITERRANEAN BASIN
Room: Jefferson
Time: 8:00 AM–9:30 AM
Chair: Ashley Cercone
Participants:
8:00 Ashley Cercone and Zeynep Bilgen—Double Handled Vessels at Seyitömer
Höyük in Kütahya, Turkey: The Manufacture, Use, and Trade of Depas Cups
8:15 Rachel Kulick—An Urban Micromorphological Perspective on Neopalatial
Environmental Changes at Bronze Age Palaikastro, Crete
8:30 Laura Swantek—Reconfiguring Social Networks: The Emergence of Social
Complexity before and after Urbanism on Cyprus
8:45 Sergi Lozano, Luce Prignano, Francesca Fulminante and Ignacio Morer—
Network Models for the Emergence of Transportation Infrastructures in Central
Italy (1175/1150─500 BC ca)
9:00 Eilis Monahan—Enclosure and Surveillance: The Development of a Disciplinary
Landscape in Bronze Age Cyprus
9:15 Emily Anderson—Like a Lion, as a Man: Seals and Poetry in Minoan Crete
Norbert Stanchly—Broken Molds, Burned Wealth, and Scattered Monuments: Defining the
Terminal Classic Period at Pacbitun
Cynthia Robin—Terminal Classic Terminal Deposits at Chan, Belize
Amber VanDerwarker—Discussant
Jaime R. Pagan-Jimenez—Discussant
Andrew Vovides—Discussant
153-e Carolina Belmar, Omar Reyes, Ximena Albornoz, Flavia Morello Repetto and
Manuel J. San Román—Diet among Marine Hunter-Gatherer-Fishers of the
Northern Patagonian Channels (41°50’- 47° S): Assessing Plant Use and
Consumption through Dental Calculus Studies
153-f Martha Wendel, David L. Lentz, Timothy Beach and Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach—
Raised Field Agriculture in the Maya Lowlands: Archaeobotanical Remains from
Birds of Paradise
153-g Amanda Lane, Katherine Cynkar, Kimberly Kasper and Anthony Graesch—
What’s In a Seed?: An Experimental Archaeological Study of Elderberry
(Sambucas sp.) Processing on the Pacific Northwest Coast
153-h Chuenyan Ng—Subsistence Economies among Bronze Age Steppe
Communities in the Southeastern Ural Mountains Region, Russia
153-i Raymond Mauldin, J. Kevin Hanselka, Cynthia Munoz and Leonard Kemp—Old
Collections and New Approaches: Estimating Mast Resource Use in the Lower
Pecos Canyonlands of Southwest Texas
153-j Bryan Núñez Aparcana and Nina Castillo—The Paleoethnobotanical Remains of
the Archaeological Site of Cerro Azul, Cañete (Lima, Peru): Changes through
Occupation
153-k Amy Cromartie—Mountain, Steppes, and Barley: GIS Modeling of Human
Environmental Interactions In the Armenian Highlands during the Bronze and
Iron Ages
153-l Dominique Sparks-Stokes, Susan Allen and Alan P. Sullivan III—Deposition,
Disturbance, and Dumping: The Application of Archaeobotanical Measures to
Taphonomic Questions
[156] POSTER SESSION ARCHAIC LANDSCAPES: POVERTY POINT AND THE BROADER
AMERICAN SOUTHEAST
Room: Exhibit Hall B South
Time: 8:00 AM–10:00 AM
Chair: Matthew Sanger
Participants:
156-a Shannon Torrens—Moving Earth at Poverty Point: Investigating “Perforators” as
Specialized Basket Making Tools
156-b Rebecca Hunt, Tiffany Raymond, Anna Patchen, Sarah Gilleland and Matthew
Sanger—Prepared Floors on Mound A Revealed through Near-Surface
Geophysics
156-c Tiffany Raymond, Carl P. Lipo, Matthew Sanger, Timothy de Smet and Anna
Patchen—Magnetometer Surveys and the Complex Prehistoric Landscape of
Poverty Point, Louisiana
156-d Sarah Gilleland, Jennifer Amico, Anna Patchen, Tiffany Raymond and Rebecca
Hunt—The Rings of Poverty Point, UNESCO World Heritage Site: A
Geophysical Investigation
156-e William Frazer, James Bourke, Timothy de Smet and Alex Nikulin —Seismic
Survey of Poverty Point Mound A
156-f Michael Hargrave, R. Berle Clay, Diana Greenlee and Rinita Dalan—New
Evidence for Poverty Point’s Complex Developmental History
156-g Alesha Marcum-Heiman and Diana Greenlee—Beyond the Boundaries:
Systematic Survey of the Poverty Point Landscape
156-h Kelly Ervin—Parsing out the Pace of Occupation at Poverty Point
[157] POSTER SESSION REPORTS FROM THE JUNGLE: NEW AND ONGOING RESEARCH
FROM THE THREE RIVERS REGION OF THE MAYA LOWLANDS
Room: Exhibit Hall B South
Time: 8:00 AM–10:00 AM
Chairs: Melanie Saldana and Toni Gonzalez
Participants:
157-a Michael Stowe—Settlement Pattern Analysis at the Medicinal Trail Community,
Northwestern Belize: Results of Topographic Mapping from 2013-
157-b Michael Prout—Primary or Secondary Deposition: Midnight Terror Cave
Operation V
157-c Neil Kohanski, Toni Gonzalez and Samantha Lorenz—Incensarios, Copal, and
Speleothems: Interpreting the Function of Chultun 3 at Mul Ch’en Witz
157-d Gertrude Kilgore, Claire Novotny and Alyssa Farmer—Domestic Activity Areas in
a Late Classic Residential Courtyard Group at Chan Chich, Belize
157-e Brian Waldo, Samantha Lorenz and Toni Gonzales—Investigating the Spatial
Analysis of Chultuneob at Mul Ch’en Witz, Belize
157-f Christina Iglesias, Samantha Lorenz and Toni Gonzalez—Redefining the
Relationship between the Surface and the Subterranean at Mul Ch’en Witz, La
Milpa, Belize
157-g Colleen O’Brien, Sheldon Smith and Nicole DeFrancisco—Bench Please: A
Comparative Analysis of Bench Features in Mesoamerica
126 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Friday Morning, April 13
9:00 Betsy Kohut, George J. Bey III and Tomás Gallareta Negrón—A Re-evaluation
of Yotholin Pattern-Burnished: Evidence of Early Preclassic Ceramics?
9:15 Melissa Galvan, William Ringle and Betsy Kohut—Recent Research on the
Formative and Early Classic Periods in the Yaxhom Valley, Yucatán
9:30 Michael Smyth—Preclassic Settlement Hierarchy at Xcoch in the Puuc Region
of Yucatan
9:45 Evan Parker, George J. Bey III and Tomás Gallareta Negrón—Middle Preclassic
Greenstone Caches from Paso del Macho, Yucatan
10:00 E. Wyllys Andrews—Discussant
[164] SYMPOSIUM NEW FINDINGS FROM THE FAR WESTERN PUEBLOAN REGION:
PAPERS IN HONOR OF M ARGARET LYNEIS
Room: Madison B
Time: 8:00 AM–10:30 AM
Chairs: Karen Harry and Sachiko Sakai
Participants:
8:00 Laureen Perry—Margaret Weide Lyneis - Archaeologist, Professor, Mentor,
Student, and Friend
8:15 James Allison—Ceramic Production and Exchange among the Virgin Anasazi,
30 Years Later
8:30 Sachiko Sakai—Changes in the Sources of Olivine-Tempered Ceramics and the
Social Interaction Patterns among the Virgin Branch Ancestral Pueblo
8:45 Daniel Perez and Karen Harry—House 47: A Case Study of Abandonment and
Trade in the Lowland Virgin Branch Puebloan Region
Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 129
Friday Morning, April 13
9:30 Christine Hernandez and Dan Healan—The Ceramics and Chronology of the
Ucareo-Zinapécuaro Obsidian Source Area, Michoacán, Mexico
9:45 Marion Forest, Elsa Jadot and Aurelie Manin—Houses in the City: Domestic
Economy and Space at Malpaís Prieto, Michoacan
10:00 Antoine Dorison, Gregory Pereira and Marion Forest—Thirty Years Later.
Revisiting the Tarascan City of Las Milpillas and Its Environment, Malpaís de
Zacapu, Michoacán
10:15 José Luis Punzo Díaz—Tarascan Presence in Central South Michoacan. New
Researches
10:30 Marie Arnauld—Cities on the Move across Northwestern Mesoamerica:
Contribution by Dominique Michelet
10:45 Helen Pollard—Discussant
11:00 Dominique Michelet—Discussant
[171] SYMPOSIUM THINGS WITH A MIND OF THEIR OWN: THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF NON-
HUMAN AGENCY
Room: Washington Room 1
Time: 8:00 AM–11:30 AM
Chair: Monica L. Smith
Participants:
8:00 Monica L. Smith—Nature as Agent: Mass-Event, Incremental, and Biotic
Perspectives
Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 133
Friday Morning, April 13
10:15 Jurgen Schulze, Connor Smith, Philip Weber, Thomas DeFanti and Thomas E.
Levy—3D Cyber-Archaeology Dissemination through Scientific Visualization -
Personal and Large-Scale Virtual Reality Platforms
10:30 Benjamin Porter, Christopher Hoffman and Kea Johnston—Object
Photogrammetry at the Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology: Opportunities
and Challenges
10:45 Christopher Hoffman and Michael Black—CollectionSpace at the Phoebe A.
Hearst Museum of Anthropology: A Strategic Information Platform for Cultural
Heritage Collections
11:00 Ruth Tringham—Discussant
11:15 Questions and Answers
[173] SYMPOSIUM THE TIES THAT BIND AND THE WALLS THAT DIVIDE: PREHISTORIC TO
CONTEMPORARY MAYA M ANIPULATION OF SOCIAL SPACE
Room: Lincoln 2
Time: 8:00 AM–11:30 AM
Chairs: Thomas Guderjan and Jennifer Mathews
Participants:
8:00 Thomas Guderjan, Jopshua Kwoka, Colleen Hanratty and Sara Eshleman—
Albarradas, Solarés, and Classic Maya Land Tenure in Northwestern Belize
8:15 J. Gregory Smith, Alejandra Alonso Olvera, Soledad Ortiz and Atasta Flores—
Boundary Dynamics between Chichen Itza and Ek Balam
8:30 Daniel Vallejo-Caliz and Scott Hutson—Regional Integration during the Late
Preclassic in Ucí, Yucatán
8:45 Stephanie Miller, Aline Magnoni, Traci Ardren and Travis Stanton—Coba’s
Periphery and Rethinking Site Boundaries
9:00 Ashley Booher and Brett A. Houk—Processional Architecture at Chan Chich,
Belize
9:15 Justine Shaw—Sacbeob in the Cochuah Region: Barriers or Links?
9:30 Samantha Krause, Timothy Beach, Sheryl Luzzadder-Beach, Thomas Guderjan
and Fred Valdez—Canals, Sacbeob and Defining Space in Ditched Agricultural
Fields in the Three Rivers Region, Northwestern Belize
9:45 Payson Sheets and Christine C. Dixon—Constructing the Social Fabric of a
Community: Household Service Relationships to the Ceren Village
10:00 Bernadette Cap, M. Kathryn Brown and Whitney Lytle—The Axis Connecting
Classic Maya Economy and Ritual at Xunantunich, Belize
10:15 Jennifer Mathews—Taming the Maya Jungle: Decauville Railroads in 19th and
Early 20th Century Yucatán
10:30 Rani Alexander—Cross Markers and Commemorating Place in the Titles of
Ebtún, Yucatán
10:45 Tiffany Cain—Kept Out or Closed In? An Analysis of Civilian Fortification
Strategies during the Maya Social War
11:00 Hector Hernandez, Francisco Canseco and Joaquin Venegas—Industrial
Heritage and Henequen Landscapes: The Social Spaces along the Conkal-
Progreso Railway in Northern Yucatan (1886–1950)
11:15 Grace Lloyd Bascopé—An Ethno-ecological View of the Evolution of “Solares”:
A Yucatan Maya Houselot Case Study
Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 135
Friday Morning, April 13
[174] SYMPOSIUM THE HUMAN ODYSSEY IN EARTH’S HIGH MOUNTAINS AND PLATEAUS
Room: Lincoln 3
Time: 8:00 AM–11:30 AM
Chairs: Brian Stewart and Kurt Rademaker
Participants:
8:00 Brian Stewart and Kurt Rademaker—On the Trail of Homo through Earth’s High
Mountains and Plateaus
8:15 Yu-chao Zhao and Brian Stewart—Tracing Late Quaternary Highland-Dryland
Social Connectivity in Southern Africa with Ostrich Eggshell Bead Strontium
Values: Preliminary Results
8:30 Ralf Vogelsang—The Mountain Exile Hypothesis: How Humans Benefited from
African High Altitude Ecosystems in Ethiopia
8:45 Elham Ghasidian and Saman Heydari-Guran—Cultural Diversity in the Zagros
Mountains and the Expansion of Modern Humans into the Iranian Plateau
9:00 Federica Fontana—Southern Alpine Late Paleolithic and Mesolithic landscapes
9:15 David Rhode—Tibet before Pastoralism
9:30 Jason LaBelle and Kelton Meyer—Passing Through or Settling Down?
Paleoindian Occupation of Colorado’s Southern Rocky Mountains, USA
9:45 Christopher Morgan—High Altitude Settlement as Evolutionary Process
10:00 Kurt Rademaker—An Interdisciplinary Approach to Investigate Early Andean
Settlement Dynamics and Adaptation
10:15 Elizabeth Pintar and María Fernanda Rodríguez—12,500 Years of Altitude
10:30 Questions and Answers
10:45 Mark Aldenderfer—Discussant
11:00 Nicholas Conard—Discussant
11:15 Bonnie Pitblado—Discussant
[175] SYMPOSIUM URBANISM, PRODUCTION, AND EMPIRE: NEW CASE STUDIES FROM
ANGKORIAN CAMBODIA
Room: Lincoln 4
Time: 8:00 AM–11:30 AM
Chair: Sarah Klassen
Participants:
8:00 Michael Coe—Discussant
8:15 Roland Fletcher—Discussant
8:30 Piphal Heng, Miriam Stark, Peter Grave, Lisa Kealhofer and Darith Ea—
Angkorian Settlements and Interactions in the Cambodia Middle Mekong Region
8:45 Christophe Pottier—The Challenge of the Grid: A Conceptual Frontier in
Angkor?
9:00 Alison K. Carter, Piphal Heng, Miriam Stark, Rachna Chhay and Damian
Evans—Urbanism and Residential Patterning in Angkor
9:15 Rachna Chhay, Piphal Heng, Visoth Chhay and Yukitsugu Tabata—Changing
Angkorian Stoneware Production Modes: Bang Kong Kiln and Thnal Mrech Kiln
9:30 Yukitsugu Tabata—Techno-morphological Approach to the Stoneware
Production in Angkor
9:45 Miriam Stark, Peter Grave, Lisa Kealhofer, Darith Ea and Boun Suy Tan—Urban
Economies and State “Peripheries”: Angkorian Stoneware Ceramic Production
and Distribution
10:00 Mitch Hendrickson, Stéphanie Leroy, Quan Hua, Kaseka Phon and Enrique
Vega—Space, the Iron Frontier: Production, Spatial Organization and Historicity
of Iron Metallurgy within the Angkorian Khmer Empire, Cambodia (9th to 15th c.
CE)
136 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Friday Morning, April 13
189-d Emily Zavodny, Martin Welker and Sarah McClure—A Pawsitively Interesting
Prehistory of Dogs: New Stable Isotope and Morphometric Analyses from
Croatia
189-e Roxanne Wildenstein, Aubrey Cannon and David Burley—Utilization of Fish
Resources at the Hopoate Site on Tongatapu, Kingdom of Tonga
189-f Polly Burnette-Egan—Zooarchaeology and Spatial Analysis at Tepe
Farukhabad: New Life for Legacy Data
2:00 James Johnson—Beyond the Final Frontier: Time and Materiality in the
Peripheralization of Bronze Age Eurasian Steppe Pastoral Societies
2:15 Nicole Rose—Corroded but Enduring: On the Perpetuation of a Scholarly Iron
Curtain in Western Archaeological Thought and Practice
2:30 Cameron Turley—Centering Alluitsoq: The Potential for an Indigenous
Archaeology in Greenland
2:45 Matthew Murray—“Our Past is Not the Other”—Anthropological Archaeology and
Academic Peripheries in Central Europe
3:00 Alexander Bauer—Discussant
[198] SYMPOSIUM THE RISE AND FALL OF THE AFRICAN HUMID PERIOD: CLIMATE
CHANGE AND HUMAN RESPONSE IN HOLOCENE AFRICA
Room: Lincoln 3
Time: 1:00 PM–3:15 PM
Chairs: Steven Goldstein and Elisabeth Hildebrand
Participants:
1:00 Henry Lamb—The African Humid Period: Paleolimnological and Paleoecological
Evidence
1:15 Steven Brandt, Alice Leplongeon and Clément Ménard—Hunter-Gatherer
Responses to the “Early” African Humid Period ~15-12 ka
1:30 Steven Goldstein, Elisabeth Hildebrand, Michael Storozum and Lawrence
Robbins—Resilience Theory and Human-Environment Interactions during the
Early Holocene at Lothagam-Lokam, Northern Kenya
1:45 Mica Jones and Ruth Tibesasa—Bridging the “Kansyore gap”: Continuous
Occupation and Changing Subsistence Strategies at Namundiri A, Eastern
Uganda
2:00 Stanley Ambrose, Andrew Zipkin, Douglas J. Kennett, Abigail Fisher and Jessica
Thompson—Dietary and Environmental Reconstruction with Stable Isotopes of
Early, Middle and Late Holocene Humans from Northern Malawi
148 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Friday Afternoon, April 13
2:15 Kendra Chritz, Elisabeth Hildebrand, Thure Cerling, Elizabeth Sawchuk and
Ndiema Emmanuel—Local Responses to Global Events: Regionally Distinct
Dietary Changes among Eastern African Herders at the Close of the African
Humid Period
2:30 Peter Coutros—Flexibility against Fragility at the Diallowali Site System during
the 1st Millennium BC
2:45 John Arthur, Matthew Curtis, Kathryn Arthur and Jay Stock—From Bayira, the
Earliest African Genome, to a Place of Refuge: Mota Cave’s History in
Southwestern Ethiopia
3:00 Jessica Thompson, Andrew Zipkin, David Wright, Stanley Ambrose and Flora
Schilt—Out with a Whimper or a Bang? Hunter-Gatherer Response to the End of
the African Humid Period in Northern Malawi
[199] SYMPOSIUM MAKING MORE WITH LESS: REFLECTIONS AND NEW APPROACHES TO
THE PROTOHISTORIC PERIOD IN THE NORTHEAST
Room: Lincoln 4
Time: 1:00 PM–3:15 PM
Chairs: John Campbell and Arthur Anderson
Participants:
1:00 Arthur Anderson—Strategies for Exploring the Protohistoric Period on the
Southern Maine Coast
1:15 Gabriel Hrynick—The Devil’s Head Site in Maine: The Organization of the
Protohistoric Wabanaki World
1:30 Tim Spahr—Cape Porpoise Archaeological Partnership
1:45 Trevor Lamb—Incised Lines: Mortuary Ceramics and Their Role in Defining
Protohistoric Chronologies in the Far Northeast 1900–1960
2:00 Kenneth Holyoke—Persistent Places in the Prehistoric Wabanaki Homeland:
Understanding the Role of Lithics in Interaction, Exchange, and Territoriality on
the Maritime Peninsula
2:15 Katherine Patton, Susan Blair and Ramona Nicholas—Recent Insights into
Protohistoric Foodways in the Northern Quoddy Region of the Northeast
2:30 Michael Deal—Early Seventeenth Century French Feasting in Acadia and Its
Relation to Pre-contact Mi’kmaq Practices
2:45 John Campbell—Revisiting Contact Interactions of the Keji’kewe’k L’nuk, or
Recent People, and Europeans in the Mi’kma’ki
3:00 Questions and Answers
[200] SYMPOSIUM PALEOLITHIC SURFACE SITES: NEW SURVEYS, METHODS, AND DATA
Room: Delaware A
Time: 1:00 PM–3:30 PM
Chairs: Eric Heffter and Jonathan Reeves
Participants:
1:00 Eric Heffter—Lithic Analysis of Paleolithic Surface Scatters from Pleistocene
River Terraces in the Republic of Serbia
1:15 David R. Braun, Matthew Douglass, Benjamin Davies and Jonathan Reeves—
Whole Assemblage Behavioral Indicators: Expectations and Inferences from
Surface and Excavated Records at Elandsfontein, South Africa
1:30 Sheila Nightingale, Jessica Thompson, Jacob Davis, Flora Schilt and Jeong-
Heon Choi—Evaluating the Effects of Human Disturbance on Middle Stone Age
Surface Finds from Northern Malawi
Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 149
Friday Afternoon, April 13
1:45 Jonathan Reeves, Matthew Douglass, Seminew Asrat, Melissa Miller and David
R. Braun—Landscape Evolution, Digital Terrain Analysis, and the Integrity of
Surface Assemblages: A Case Study from the Koobi Fora Formation
2:00 Paula Ugalde, Calogero Santoro and Eugenia Gayo—Weathering of Surficial
Lithic Assemblages in the Hyperarid Core of the Atacama Desert, Chile
2:15 Karen Borrazzo—‘To be or not to be…’ A Taphonomic Perspective on
Pseudoartifacts
2:30 Matthew Douglass, Simon Holdaway and Sam Lin—Investigating Prehistoric
Land Use History and Place Use Variability with Low Density Surface Scatters of
Stone Artifacts in the Oglala National Grassland, Northwestern Nebraska
2:45 Questions and Answers
3:00 LuAnn Wandsnider—Discussant
3:15 Curtis Runnels—Discussant
[202] SYMPOSIUM WE DIG NATIONAL PARKS: THE PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE OF
ARCHEOLOGY IN THE NATIONAL CAPITAL REGION
Room: Washington Room 6
Time: 1:00 PM–3:30 PM
Chairs: Josh Torres and Katherine Birmingham
Participants:
1:00 John Bedell—The Potomac Gorge
1:15 Josh Torres—The Old Stone House Revisited
1:30 Emily Button Kambic and Lauren Hughes—Retracing Reconstruction: America’s
Second Founding in Archaeological Perspective
1:45 Bradley Krueger—Of Wharves and Watercraft: Exploring the Maritime
Archeology of Theodore Roosevelt Island
150 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Friday Afternoon, April 13
2:00 Sophia Kelly, Andrew Landsman and Justin Ebersole—Implementing the NPS
Cultural Resources Climate Change Strategy at the Chesapeake and Ohio
Canal National Historical Park
2:15 Robert Sonderman and Stefan Woehlke—Our Sites at Risk: Climate Related
Threats to NPS Administered Archeological Sites
2:30 Marian Creveling and Karen Orrence—Thinking inside the Box: Research
Potential of National Park Service Archeological Collections at the Museum
Resource Center
2:45 Katherine Birmingham and Christine Ames—D.C. Urban Archeology Corps: The
Surveying is in the Details
3:00 Questions and Answers
3:15 Gregory Katz—Digging the Anacostia River Landscape: Geoarchaeology and
the Buried Past in the National Capital
1:45 Samantha Muller—An Overview of the History of LaGrange Cemetery and Some
of Its Notable and Not So Notable Residents
2:00 Nicholas Bonneau—An Accounting of the Dead: Historical Epidemiology and Big
Data in the Arch Street Project
2:15 George Leader, Kimberlee Moran, Jared Beatrice and Anna Dhody—Preliminary
Results of Material Culture from the Historic First Baptist Church Cemetery,
Philadelphia (ca. 1700–1860) and Analytical Problems Arising from Stressed
Excavations and the Lack of Formal Legal Oversight
2:30 Gerald Conlogue and Michelle O’Connor—The Role of Radiographer as a
Member of the Arch Street Project Team
2:45 Allison Grunwald—Analysis of the Faunal Remains at the Arch Street Cemetery
Site
3:00 Jared Beatrice, George Leader, Kimberlee Moran and Anna Dhody—
Bioarchaeological Analysis of Human Skeletal Remains from the Historic First
Baptist Church Cemetery, Philadelphia (ca. 1700–1860): Preliminary Results
3:15 Doug Mooney—Discussant
1:45 Joanne Pillsbury—Aztecs in the Empire City: The Rise and Fall of Ancient
American Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1877–1914
2:00 Megan E. O’Neil—Collective Biographies: Ancient Maya Objects in Collections,
Past and Present
2:15 Victoria Lyall—Connecting Collections: The Ancient Americas in American
Museums
2:30 Christian Feest and Viviane Luiza da Silva—Between Enlightenment and
Structuralism: Bororo and Kadiwéu Collections outside Brazil, 1791–1938
2:45 Aaron Glass and Judith Berman—Reassembling The Social Organization:
Uniting Museums, Archives, and Indigenous Knowledge around Franz Boas’s
1897 Monograph
3:00 Davide Domenici—Discussant
3:15 Aron Crowell—Discussant
3:30 Questions and Answers
[211] SYMPOSIUM THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK: NEW DATA ON WARI IN MIDDLE HORIZON
PERU
Room: Madison A
Time: 1:00 PM–4:00 PM
Chairs: Patrick Ryan Williams and Milosz Giersz
Participants:
1:00 M. Elizabeth Grávalos and Emily Sharp—Enduring Traditions, Material
Transformations: Understanding Wari State Influence in Highland Ancash, Peru
1:15 Milosz Giersz—The Force Awakens: The Nature and Chronology of Wari
Presence in the Huarmey Valley
1:30 Wieslaw Wieckowski—Embodied Empire: Life and Death of Wari Elites from
Castillo de Huarmey
1:45 Krzysztof Makowski and Roberto Pimentel—Skilled Craftsmen, Ancestors Cult,
and Hegemonic Strategies of the Wari Empire
2:00 Rosa Maria Varillas and Francesca Fernandini—Wari Textiles for the Everyday
and the Afterlife
2:15 Jason Kennedy, Bradley Parker and Matt Edwards—Plow Zone Archaeology in
a Wari Imperial Center
2:30 Questions and Answers
Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 155
Friday Afternoon, April 13
3:45 Ashley Sharpe, Kitty Emery and John Pfeiffer—Bringing Two Halves Together:
Combining Modern Phylogenetics and Zooarchaeological Analysis to
Understand Past and Present Trends of Freshwater Mussels (Unionidae) in
Mesoamerica
4:00 August Costa, Jonathan Lohse and Stephanie Orsini—High Resolution
Chronology and Paleobiogeography of Bison and Pronghorn Occupation in
Southeast Texas and their Implications for Human Paleoecology
4:15 Carla Hadden, Margo Schwadron, Alexandra Parsons and Taesoo Jung—
Paleoecology, Paleoclimate, and Paleoeconomy at the Turner River Mound
Complex, Everglades National Park
4:30 Arianne Boileau—Testing the Stratigraphic Integrity of Shallow Deposits through
Zooarchaeology at Lamanai, Belize
225-f Escee Lopez, Santos Cisceneros, Shelby Medina, Jessica Morales and Rene
Vellanoweth—Economic and Style Trends of Shell Beads from the Tule Creek
Village Site (CA-SNI-25) of San Nicolas Island, California
225-g Sara Zaia and Katherine Rose—Connecting the Dead: A Comparison of Pre-
dynastic Nubian and Egyptian Cemeteries
225-h Madeleine Yakal—Origins and Movement of Tradeware Ceramics in the Bicol
River, Philippines: Applying pXRF Technology to Trade and Interaction
Research
3:30 Dietrich Stout, Justin Pargeter, Nada Khreisheh, Katherine Bryant and Erin
Hecht—The “Molecular Genetics” of Social Learning: Skill Acquisition and
Individual Differences in Learning
3:45 Kathryn Ranhorn, David R. Braun, Francys Subiaul and Alison Brooks—
Levallois, Learning, and Lithic Variation: Results from Porcelain Flintknapping
Experiments
4:00 Alison Brooks and John Yellen—Social Learning Among recent Hunter-
Gatherers: Jun/wasi Examples
4:15 Luke Premo—Discussant
4:30 Steven Kuhn—Discussant
4:45 Questions and Answers
[229] SYMPOSIUM THE ATLANTIC IRON AGE AND THE CIVIDADE DE BAGUNTE IN
NORTHWEST PORTUGAL
Room: Madison B
Time: 8:00 AM –9:45 AM
Chairs: Mariah Wade and Pedro Brochado De Almeida
Participants:
8:00 Pedro Brochado De Almeida—The Cividade de Bagunte Archaeological Project
8:15 Mariah Wade—The Penumbra of Castro Archaeology: Evidence and Questions
8:30 Jordan Bowers—Space, Place, and Landscape at Cividade de Bagunte
8:45 John Duncan Hurt—The Cividade de Bagunte and the Problems of Castro
Architecture
9:00 Patricia Neuhoff-Malorzo—Agriculture and Resource Procurement for the Castro
Settlements of NW Iberia: Examination of Floatation Samples for the Castro Site
of Bagunte
9:15 Elizabeth De Marigny—The Economics behind Pottery: The Impact of
Romanization on Castro Culture Ceramics in the Littoral Northwest
9:30 Nadya Prociuk—Changing Times, Changing Ways? Evidence for Metallurgy at
the Cividade de Bagunte
[233] FORUM ENOUGH TALKING ALREADY: TIME TO DEFINE PUBLIC EDUCATION FOR THE
NEXT 25 YEARS
(Sponsored by SAA Public Archaeology Interest Group [PAIG])
Room: Jefferson
Time: 8:00 AM–10:00 AM
Moderators: Eleanor King and Carol Ellick
Participants:
Mia Carey—Discussant
Meredith Langlitz—Discussant
Shereen Lerner—Discussant
Jeanne Moe—Discussant
Elizabeth Reetz—Discussant
LaMarise Reid—Discussant
Della Scott-Ireton—Discussant
Lynne Sebastian—Discussant
Ben Thomas—Discussant
Jessica Yaquinto—Discussant
168 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Saturday Morning, April 14
[235] FORUM LEAST COST PATH TO REDUCE THE GENDER GAP: FEMALE VOICES
CONTRIBUTING TO GIS AND REMOTE SENSING IN ARCHAEOLOGY
Room: Park Tower Suite 8222
Time: 8:00 AM–10:00 AM
Moderators: Gabriela Ore Menendez and Lauren Kohut
Participants:
Heather Richards-Rissetto—Discussant
Jennie Sturm—Discussant
Hali Thurber—Discussant
Jennifer Haas—Discussant
Marieka Brouwer Burg—Discussant
Kisha Supernant—Discussant
Meghan Howey—Discussant
Silvia Tomaskova—Discussant
[237] FORUM THE INTANGIBLE DIMENSIONS OF FOOD IN THE CARIBBEAN ANCIENT AND
RECENT PAST
Room: Park Tower Suite 8206
Time: 8:00 AM–10:00 AM
Moderators: L. Antonio Curet and Mary Jane Berman
Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 169
Saturday Morning, April 14
Participants:
Brittany Mistretta—Discussant
Sophia Perdikaris—Discussant
Christina M. Giovas—Discussant
Sarah Oas—Discussant
Jaime R. Pagan-Jimenez—Discussant
Amanda Logan—Discussant
239-e Amanda Renner, Ralph Hartley and William Hunt—A Geospatial Analysis
Exploring Movement and Perception in the Selection of Alpine Cairn Locations in
Southeast Alaska
239-f Robert Gustas and Kisha Supernant—Theoretical Frameworks for Modelling
Late-Pleistocene Costal Migration into the New World
239-g Rebekah Truhan—The Grateful Dead: A GIS Approach to Determining the
Correlation between Habitation Sites and Burial Sites in the Woodland Period in
Iowa
239-h Danielle Cannon and Carly Plesic—Using ArcMap to Create a Database for an
Historic Cemetery in Northeast Pennsylvania
239-i Erin Cagney and Joe Dent—Of Palisades and Postmolds
239-j Derrick Marcucci, Susan Gade and Antonio Martinez Tunon—The VerHage Site:
A Late Archaic Seasonal Village located in Wallkill Drainage of Southeastern
New York
239-k Emily Mierswa, Crystina Friese and Meghan Howey—Graves in the Forest:
Mapping Lost Colonial Cemeteries in the Oyster River Watershed
239-l Andrew Clark—Warfare and Topography in the Middle Missouri
239-m Vanessa Sullivan—Sinking into the Maritime Archaeology of the Ocean State:
The Use of GIS to Analyze Rhode Island’s Submerged Archaeological Sensitivity
239-n Ashley Hampton—A Stone Throw(n) Away: Examining the Interconnection
between Identity and Division of Labor through an Evolutionary Analysis of
Household Spatial Organization
239-o Moira Peckham and Annie Danis—Community- Engaged Archaeology with
Abiquiú, New Mexico
239-p Becca Peixotto—Paths of Connection in the Great Dismal Swamp: Wetland
Watercourses as Indigenous and Maroon Landscape Features
[243] SYMPOSIUM BELIZE CAMP 2017: EXCAVATIONS, ANALYSIS, AND INSIGHTS FOR
THE COLHA ARCHAIC M AYA PROJECT
Room: Park Tower Suite 8216
Time: 8:00 AM–10:00 AM
Chairs: Fred Valdez and Luisa Aebersold
Participants:
8:00 Palma Buttles and Fred Valdez—Colha, Northern Belize: A History and Record
of Research
8:15 David Burns, Luisa Aebersold, Fred Valdez, Samantha Krause and Anastasia
Kotsoglou—Excavations at Two New Operations at Colha
8:30 Lauren Sullivan, David Hyde, Robin Robertson, Palma Buttles and Fred
Valdez—Material Culture and Chronology at Colha, Belize: Recent Findings and
Future Directions
8:45 Annie Riegert and Lucy Gill—Mortuary Landscapes and Placemaking through
Veneration at the Maya Site of Colha
9:00 Sharon Hankins and Megan Skillern— Experimental Ceramic Technology:
Colha, Belize
9:15 Anastasia Kotsoglou, Samantha Krause, Luisa Aebersold, Fred Valdez and
Timothy Beach —Soils, Sedimentary Rocks, and Scale: Recent
Geoarchaeological Investigations at Colha, Northern Belize
9:30 Luisa Aebersold, Fred Valdez and Brittany Mitchell—Seeds that Germinate:
Models, Paleobotanical, and Archaeological Evidence for Colha’s Early
Inhabitants
9:45 Fred Valdez—Discussant
8:15 Pei-Lin Yu and Marcy Rockman—The State of the Art in Stating Risk:
Assessment of Climate Vulnerability Assessments for National Park Service
Archaeology and Cultural Heritage Resources
8:30 Carrie Hritz, Marcy Rockman, Robert Winthrop and Torben Rick—Archaeology
as Actionable Science on Climate Change: Lessons from Interdisciplinary
Collaboration
8:45 Scott Ingram—Engaging the Past for a Warming World
9:00 LouAnn Wurst and Stephen Mrozowski—Historical Archaeology of Capitalism
and Climate Change
9:15 Keith Kintigh and Jeffrey Altschul—Convergence Research and the Coalition for
Archaeological Synthesis
9:30 Arlene Fleming—Challenges for Archaeologists: A Changing Climate Is Only
One Development
9:45 Margo Schwadron—Engaging Community in Climate Change, Heritage
Resource Management and Citizen Science: Examples from Florida’s National
Parks
10:00 Anne Jensen—Discussant
[254] SYMPOSIUM PLANTS GOT A LOT TO SAY IF YOU TAKE THE TIME TO LISTEN:
GARDENS IN THE AMERICAN NEOTROPICS
Room: Wilson C
Time: 8:00 AM–11:00 AM
Chairs: Maia Dedrick and Andrew Wyatt
Participants:
8:00 Andrew Wyatt—In the Garden: Studies in the American Neotropics
8:15 Thomas Killion—Gardens, Infields and Outfields: Cultivation Intensity,
Neotropical Landscapes and the Evolution of Early Agricultural Systems
8:30 Caroline Antonelli—Landscape Modification Seen from Above: Remote Sensing
Analysis at Postclassic Mayapan
8:45 Lydie Dussol, Louise Purdue, Eva Lemonnier, Dominique Michelet and Philippe
Nondédéo—Domesticated Forests? Interpreting Agroforestry Practices from
Diachronic Trends in Firewood Collection at the Classic Maya City of Naachtun
9:00 Venicia Slotten and David L. Lentz—The Social Dynamics of Ceren’s Household
Gardens
9:15 Christine A. Hastorf—The Flavors Archaeobotany Forgot
9:30 Traci Ardren—Household Garden Plant Agency in the Creation of Classic Maya
Social Identities
9:45 BrieAnna Langlie—Gardening for Victory: War Gardens in the Ancient Andes
10:00 Maia Dedrick, Carly Pope and Morgan Russell—Ritual Use of the Rejolladas of
Tahcabo, Yucatán
10:15 Anna Browne Ribeiro—My Grandfather’s Castanhal: Plants, Community,
Territory, and Memory in the Brazilian Amazon
10:30 Anabel Ford—Discussant
178 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Saturday Morning, April 14
New Mexico
11:00 Judith Habicht-Mauche—Discussant
11:15 Heather Trigg—Discussant
11:30 Questions and Answers
268-d Erin Dempsey, Steven De Vore, Ashley Barnett, Nora Greiman and Anna
Dempsey—Looking Closer at Those Dots on the Map: Documenting Mound
Sites at St. Croix National Scenic Riverway
268-e Atifa Rawan, Jamaludin Shable, M. Hussain Ahmadzai and Jodi Reeves Eyre—
The Afghanistan Cultural Heritage Education Program: A Collaborative,
International Education Model
268-f Chris North and Scott Courtright—Urban Archaeology at the Hohokam Village of
Pueblo Grande
268-g Michael Heilen, Monica Murrell, Phillip Leckman and Robert Heckman—
Exploring the Relationship between Surface and Subsurface Contexts in the
Permian Basin, Southeastern New Mexico
268-h Daniel Leonard, Kendra Rodgers McGraw and Beniamino Volta—DoD Legacy
Data: Leveraging GIS and the Web for Success
268-i Tiffany Newman, Elizabeth E. Bell and Seth VanDam—Management of WWI
Training Trenches in Light of Current Military Training
268-j Dawn Ramsey Ford and Owen Ford—Traditional Cultural Practices in America’s
Last Frontier: Conceptualizing Traditional Cultural Properties in Alaska
268-k Emily Van Alst, Laura Scheiber, Mackenzie Cory, Kirsten Hawley and Cally
Steussy—Into the West(ern Plains): Results of the 2017 Bighorn Archaeology
Field School, Park and Fremont Counties, Wyoming
270-c Sarah Taylor and Robert H. Tykot—The Dietary Importance of Maize and
Aquatic Resources during the Regional Development Period at El Dornajo,
Southwest Ecuador
270-d Jordi Rivera Prince, Gabriel Prieto and Celeste Gagnon—Disturbing the
Ancestors: Interpreting Early Intermediate Period Commingled Remains at La
Iglesia, Huanchaco Perú
270-e Bridget Bey and Véronique Bélisle— A Look at Local Populations during Wari
Expansion: Bioarchaeology and Funerary Contexts at Ak’awillay, Cusco, Peru
270-f Margot Serra, Jakob Hanschu, Amandine Flammang and Danielle Kurin —Using
Parry Fracture Data to Further Assess Violence in Andahuaylas during the Late
Intermediate Period
270-g Phil McCheyne, Julia Moss and Danielle Kurin—Cranial Modification and
Presence of Wormian Bones in Chanka Crania
270-h Brianna Herndon and Sara Becker—Movement in Moquegua: Detecting
Differential Activity Types via the Knee in a Tiwanaku Subgroup
270-i Emily Smith, Taylor MacDonald and Tiffiny A. Tung—Two Individuals, One Urn
Burial from La Real, Peru: A Bioarchaeological Investigation of Urn Burial
Practices
270-j Valda Black, Ricky Nelson, Ivanna Robledo and Danielle Kurin—Non-metric
Traits and the Influence of Cranial Modifications: A Case Study from the South-
Central Andes
270-k Genesis Torres Morales, Celeste Gagnon and Gabriel Prieto—Violence among
the Gallinazo: New Insights from Pampa la Cruz, Moche Valley
188 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Saturday Afternoon, April 14
[274] SYMPOSIUM SILK PURSES FROM SOWS’ EARS: A SESSION IN HONOR OF JOHN R.
WHITE
Room: Madison B
Time: 1:00 PM–2:45 PM
Chair: Paul Nick Kardulias
Participants:
1:00 Chuck Mastran—Excavations at the Springfield Furnace, Mercer Co., PA, and
the Euro-British Charcoal Iron Technological Tradition in America
1:15 David Parker—Beer, Bologna, and Beaux-Esprits: A Legacy of John R. White
1:30 Paul Nick Kardulias, James Torpy, Drosos Kardulias and Alina Karapandzich—
Multi-faceted Anthropology: Recent Work of the Athienou Archaeological Project
in Central Cyprus
1:45 Joe Alessi—John White’s Playboy Black vs. Playboy White, Part 2
2:00 Matt O’Mansky—Local Legacy, Local Legend: John White, Youngstown State
University, and Fifty Years of Public Archaeology
2:15 John G. Jones—Early Settlement on the Island of Grenada: Ecological Evidence
for the Extinction of Rodents and Palms
2:30 J. M. Adovasio—Discussant
[277] FORUM SANNA: SOCIAL ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE NORTH AND NORTH ATLANTIC
Room: Wilson C
Time: 1:00 PM–3:00 PM
Moderators: Kevin Smith, Michele Smith and Elie Pinta
Participants:
Sven Haakanson—Discussant
Erica Hill—Discussant
Christian K. Madsen—Discussant
Dawn Elise Mooney—Discussant
Matthew Walls—Discussant
Christopher Wolff—Discussant
[281] FORUM EXPLORING THE PATH FORWARD: THE BOY SCOUT ARCHAEOLOGY MERIT
BADGE 20 YEARS LATER
(Sponsored by SAA Public Archaeology Interest Group)
Room: Harding
Time: 1:00 PM–3:00 PM
Moderator: Kristin Keckler-Alexander
Participants:
Jeanne Moe—Discussant
John Mullin—Discussant
Charmaine Thompson—Discussant
Rita Elliott—Discussant
192 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Saturday Afternoon, April 14
3:00 Jan Athenstädt, Lewis Borck, Leslie Aragon, Corinne L. Hofman and Ulrik
Brandes—Plain Ware and Polychrome: Quantifying Perceptual Differences in
Ceramic Classification
3:15 Questions and Answers
[289] SYMPOSIUM NOW THAT I HAVE MY DEGREE, WHAT DO I DO? GOING FROM THE
CLASSROOM TO THE PROFESSION
Room: Hoover
Time: 1:00 PM–3:30 PM
Chair: Kimball Banks
Participants:
1:00 Nathan Boyless—Discussant
1:15 Linda Scott Cummings—Discussant
1:30 Carol Ellick—Discussant
1:45 Joseph Schuldenrein—Discussant
2:00 Ann Scott—Discussant
2:15 Rebecca Simon—Discussant
2:30 Mark Slaughter—Discussant
2:45 John Welch—Discussant
3:00 Maria Nieves Zedeño—Discussant
3:15 Holly Norton—Discussant
196 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Saturday Afternoon, April 14
1:45 Alexander Rivas and Brent Woodfill—Teaching Climate Change in Red States
2:00 Phyllis Messenger and Patrick Nunnally—Tweeting the Flood: Student Social
Media Fieldwork and Interactive Community Building
2:15 Doris Walter and Rebecca Bria—Multiple Ways of Understanding Peru’s
Changing Climate: Bridging Ethnographic, Archaeological, and Other Scientific
Perspectives in Student Learning
2:30 Diane Douglas—Climate Change Adaptation: Implementing Indigenous and
Local Knowledge to Increase Community Resilience
2:45 Diane Gifford-Gonzalez—Discussant
3:00 Andrew Scherer—Discussant
3:15 Kenneth Sassaman—Discussant
3:30 Questions and Answers
[295] SYMPOSIUM HUMAN ACTION AND DEEP TIME: A RETURN TO TIME AND SCALE IN
ARCHAEOLOGY
Room: Washington Room 3
Time: 1:00 PM–4:45 PM
Chairs: Thomas Hardy and Stephen Berquist
Participants:
1:00 Asa Randall—The Impersistence of Persistent Places on the St. Johns River,
Florida
1:15 Francesca Fernandini—The Timespace of the Pre-Hispanic City of Cerro de Oro
1:30 Megan Kassabaum—Mounds at the Margins: The Effect of Temporal Frontiers
on Archaeological Interpretation
1:45 Julian Salazar, Valeria Franco Salvi and Dana Carrasco—Multiple Temporalities
in the Andean Eastern Piedmont (Tucumán Province, Argentina)
2:00 Giles Spence-Morrow—Signs of History, Signs in History: Confronting the Past
in Antiquity in the Jequetepeque Valley, Peru
Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 199
Saturday Afternoon, April 14
2:15 Stephen Berquist and Thomas Hardy—Deep Time and Human Action: An
Introduction
2:30 Douglas Smit—Geology and Governance: Colonial Andean Mercury Mining and
the Marroquín Collapse of 1786
2:45 Patrick Mullins—Frontier Landscapes in the Longue Durée: The Upper Moche
Valley Chaupiyunga
3:00 James Zeidler—Deep Histories and Persistent Places: Repetitive Mound-
Building and Mimesis in the Jama Valley Landscape, Coastal Ecuador
3:15 Thomas Hardy—Assembling Empire: Continuity and Change in the Long-Term
Development of the Inca Empire
3:30 Lisa Maher and Danielle Macdonald—Becoming Neolithic or Being a Hunter-
Gatherer? Reframing the Origins of Agriculture through a Longue Durée
Perspective
3:45 Paul R. Duffy and Péter Czukor—Using Multiple Time Scales to Understand the
Divergence of Prehistoric Social Trajectories in the Carpathian Basin
4:00 Hannah Moots—Towards a Recursive Relationship between Archaeological and
Evolutionary Theory
4:15 Kirsten Vacca and Lisa Maher—Exploring the Interpretative Roles of
Microarchaeology, Ethnohistory and Ethnoarchaeology for Structuring Daily Life
in Pre-contact Hawaiian Houses
4:30 Questions and Answers
302-l Delande Justinvil, Jessica Leonard, Hannah Plumer, Thomas Guderjan and
Colleen Hanratty—The Teeth Tell All: Dentition, Demography, and
Paleopathology at Early Classical Mayan Site of Tulix Muul, Belize
302-m Lauren Koutlias and Annie Riegert—Deviancy, an Alternate Means of Child
Veneration at the Maya Site of Colha
304-i Trisha Jenz, Sarah Ledogar and Jordan Karsten —Dogs of Death: An Evaluation
of Canid Remains from a Mortuary Eneolithic Cave Site in Ukraine
304-j J. Anne Melton, Emily Briggs and Kele Missal—What’s Shape Got to Do With It?
Evaluating the Degree to Which Motion and Material Type Influence Edge
Outline of Obsidian Flakes
304-k Breeanna Charolla and Jamie Hodgkins—Zooarchaeological Analysis of a Late
Pleistocene Cave Site in Northwestern Italy, Arma Veirana
[305] POSTER SESSION HISTORIC NORTH AMERICA: THE WEST AND MIDWEST
Room: Exhibit Hall B South
Time: 2:00 PM–4:00 PM
Participants:
305-a Robert Schon—The Archaeology of Baseball: Excavations at Warren Ballpark in
Bisbee, AZ
305-b Taylor Peacock—Names, Lineages, and Document Archaeology: Examining
Traditions and Cultural Shifts in Jewish Personal Names
305-c Colleen Delaney and James T. Brewer—Stories from the Guadalasca: Changes
in Land Use along the California Coast
305-d Christopher Lowman—Many Ways of Working: Archaeological Methods at the
Arboretum Chinese Quarters, Stanford, California
305-e Cody Dalpra and Hunter Crosby—Historic Evidence of Social, Economic, and
Gender Issues at Petrified Forest National Park: Variability in the Archaeological
Signature of Historic Homesteads
305-f Molly Cannon, Kenneth Cannon, Kenneth Reid, Joel Pederson and Houston
Martin—Implications of Integrative Science Approaches for Site Documentation
at Bia Ogoi
305-g Jessica Yaquinto and Kathleen Van Vlack—Tribal Connections to the Monticello
Field Office
[310] SYMPOSIUM RICH LAND, POOR LAND: USING STABLE ISOTOPES TO EXPLORE
ANCIENT FARMING AND HERDING PRACTICES
Room: Jefferson
Time: 3:30 PM–5:00 PM
Chairs: Mallory Melton and Amber VanDerwarker
Participants:
3:30 Claire Ebert, Julie Hoggarth, Kirsten Green, Carolyn Freiwald and Jaime Awe—
The Stable Isotope Ecology of Agriculture in the Eastern Maya Lowlands from
the Preclassic through Colonial Periods
3:45 Anneke Janzen, Mary Prendergast and Katherine Grillo—Early Pastoralists in
Tanzania: Mobility and the Seasonal Round
4:00 Amber VanDerwarker, Mallory Melton and Greg Wilson—Farming, Warfare,
Drought, and Soil Fertility in the Mississippian Central Illinois River Valley:
Carbon and Nitrogen Isotopes on Maize Kernels from Five Sites Spanning Two
Centuries
4:15 Alicia Ventresca Miller—Evidence for Close Management of Sheep in Ancient
Central Asia: Foddering Techniques and Transhumance in the Final Bronze Age
4:30 Ayushi Nayak, Michael Petraglia, Nicole Boivin and Patrick Roberts—
Domesticating the Mosaic: Stable Isotope Approaches to Agroecologies in South
Asia
4:45 Sarah McClure, Claire Ebert, Emil Podrug and Douglas J. Kennett—Identifying
Animal Management Practices Using Oxygen Isotopes in Neolithic Croatia
208 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Sunday Morning, April 15
[313] ELECTRONIC SYMPOSIUM FROM THE GROUND UP: UPDATES AND LESSONS
LEARNED FROM AN OPEN NORTH AMERICAN ARCHAEOLOGY TEXTBOOK
Room: Park Tower Suite 8206
Time: 8:00 AM–10:00 AM
Chair: Stephanie Halmhofer
Participants:
Katie V. Kirakosian—Planting a Seed and Watching It Grow: Planning an Open Textbook
from Scratch
Paulina Przystupa—The Challenges of Co-authoring a Background Chapter for an Open
Textbook
Jennifer Zovar—Steering through North American Archaeology: Reflections on the
Effectiveness of an Open Textbook Steering Committee
Larkin Hood—You Read It; Don’t Forget It: Designing Activities That Help Students Learn
[319] FORUM 2018 EUROPEAN YEAR FOR CULTURAL HERITAGE: AN OPPORTUNITY FOR
ARCHAEOLOGY AND ARCHAEOLOGICAL HERITAGE PUBLIC POLICIES
(Sponsored by European Year of Cultural Heritage [European Union and
Council of Europe])
Room: Park Tower Suite 8212
Time: 8:00 AM–10:00 AM
Moderator: Felipe Criado-Boado
Participants:
Roderick B. Salisbury—Discussant
Kristian Kristiansen—Discussant
Carsten Paludan-Müller—Discussant
Thomas Whitley—Discussant
Jeffrey Vadala—Discussant
[322] LIGHTNING ROUNDS IT’S HARDER THAN IT LOOKS: THE REALITIES AND
COMPLEXITIES OF NAGPRA IMPLEMENTATION
(Sponsored by SAA Committee on Repatriation)
Room: Washington Room 1
Time: 8:00 AM–10:00 AM
Moderators: Nell Murphy and Lauren Sieg
Participants:
Alex Barker—Discussant
Rex Buck—Discussant
Allison Davis—Discussant
Briece Edwards—Discussant
Sarah Glass—Discussant
Erin Gredell—Discussant
Jordan Jacobs—Discussant
Michele Morgan—Discussant
Angela Neller—Discussant
Lara Noldner—Discussant
Melanie O’Brien—Discussant
Helen Robbins—Discussant
Adam Watson—Discussant
8:30 Andrew Ciofalo and Devon Graves—Cookware and Crockery: A Form and
Functional View from the Southern Bahamas
8:45 Jaime R. Pagan-Jimenez, Corinne L. Hofman and Menno Hoogland—Kitchen
Affairs: First Insights into the Intimacies of Food Plant Preparation at El Flaco,
Northern Dominican Republic (XII–XV Centuries)
9:00 Yadira Chinique De Armas, Ulises Miguel Gonzalez Herrera, Megan Filyk,
Roberto Rodriguez Suarez and Mirjana Roksandic—New Insights into the
Consumption of Cultigens for “Archaic” Age Populations in Cuba: The
Archaeological Site of Playa el Mango, Rio Cauto, Granma
9:15 Natalia Donner, Andrew Ciofalo, Samuel Castillo and Alexander Geurds —Pre-
colonial Griddles in Central Nicaragua: An Archaeometric and Archaeobotanical
Approach to Foodways at the Barillas Site, Chontales
9:30 Questions and Answers
9:45 William Keegan—Discussant
Transformation
10:00 Alexander Bauer—The Pragmatic Semiotics of Cultural Heritage
10:15 Lawrence Coben—Community-Based Economic Development: Is It Pragmatic?
Should It Be?
9:30 Josie Mills—Assessing the Potential for Raw Material Profiling Studies in
Modelling Neanderthal Behavioural Complexity
9:45 Radu Iovita—Behavioral Modernity (or Lack Thereof) and Its Reflection in Lithic
Assemblages
10:00 Julien Riel-Salvatore and Allison Parrish—Acculturation and Its Discontents:
Rethinking Models of Interpopulation Interaction during the Middle-Upper
Paleolithic Transition
10:15 Penny Spikins and Gail Hitchens—An Emotional Challenge: What Can We Infer
about Capacities for Social Emotions in Archaic Humans?
10:30 Questions and Answers
10:45 Fiona Coward—Discussant
10:30 Maria Lozada, Kristie Sanchez, Rex Haydon, Hans Barnard and Augusto
Cardona—The Ramada Mortuary Tradition: At the Crossroads of Nasca and
Wari in the Vitor Valley, Southern Peru
10:45 Hans Barnard, Maria Lozada and Augusto Cardona Rosas—Analysis of the
Ancient Built Environment of the Millo Complex, Vitor Valley, Peru
11:00 Sara L. Juengst, David Hansen, Sergio Chavez and Stanislava Chavez—Across
the Lake: Interregional Connections with the Tiwanaku Occupation of
Copacabana
11:15 Justin Jennings—Discussant
11:30 Anita Cook—Discussant
[337a] SYMPOSIUM REPATRIATION UNDER THE NMAI ACT AT THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF
NATURAL HISTORY, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION
Room: Madison B
Time: 9:30 AM–11:00 AM
Chair: William Billeck
Participants:
9:30 William Billeck—Repatriation at the National Museum of Natural History,
Smithsonian Institution
9:45 Dorothy Lippert—How the NMNH Rises to the Challenge of Using the Best
Available Documentation for Repatriation
10:00 Meredith Luze—Applying pXRF Technology to Repatriation at the National
Museum of Natural History
10:15 Chris Dudar—Contributions of Osteological Evidence to Repatriation
Assessments
10:30 Eric Hollinger—Beyond Repatriation at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of
Natural History
10:45 Jacqueline Cook—Discussant
220 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
Sunday Morning, April 15
2011 Dan Vergano (USA Today) AWARD FOR EXCELLENCE IN LATIN AMERICAN
2012 Mike Toner (American AND CARIBBEAN ARCHAEOLOGY
Archaeology) Initiated in 2010 to recognize an individual
2013 Julian Smith (American who has made a lasting and significant
Archaeology) contribution to the practice of archaeology
2014 Ann Gibbons (Science Magazine) and/or to the construction of archaeological
2015 Andrew Lawler (Science knowledge in Latin America or the Caribbean.
Magazine)
2016 Tamara Stewart (American 2011 Jeremy A. Sabloff
Archaeology) 2013 Luis Guillermo Lumbreras Salcedo
2017 Elizabeth Svoboda (SAPIENS) 2014 Luis Alberto Borrero
2015 Jeffrey Parsons
2016 Robert D. Drennan
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Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting 249
Index of Participants
Minc, Leah [100], [134] Mooney, Doug [204] Morris, Julia [259]
Miner, Michael [68] Moore, Christopher Morrison, Blythe [187]
Minerbi, Joanne [94] [90], [241] Morrison, Jerolyn E.
Mink, Philip [164] Moore, Elizabeth [53], [298]
Minnis, Paul [236] [328] Morrison, Kathleen
Mintz, John [228] Moore, Jerry D. [82], [213]
Mirazón Lahr, Marta [165] Morrisset, Sara [335]
[143] Moore, Mark [227] Morrow, Juliet [81],
Mires, Ann Marie [62], Moore, Summer [20] [120]
[204] Moots, Hannah [295] Morrow, Sara [296]
Mirro, Michael [256] Moragas, Natalia [275] Morsink, Joost [140]
Mischke, Bryan [221] Morales, Anthony [155] Morton, Shawn [37],
Missal, Kele [304] Morales, Carlos [252] [82], [258]
Mistretta, Brittany [34], Morales, Jessica [44], Moser, Duane [97]
[237] [225] Moses, Sharon [62]
Mitchell, Brittany [243] Morales, Ridel [299] Moses, Victoria [297]
Mitchell, Seth [85] Morales Contreras, Moss, Emanuel [130]
Mitchell, William [333] Juan Julio [55] Moss, Jessica [330]
Mixter, David [129], Morales Forte, Rubén Moss, Julia [270]
[147] [337] Motuzaite
Mizoguchi, Koji [24] Morales-Aguilar, Carlos Matuzeviciute, Giedre
Mlyniec, Michael [77] [18] [336]
Moates, Jeffrey [78] Morales-Arce, Ana [97] Mountjoy, Joseph [192]
Modl, Daniel [140] Moran, Kimberlee [62], Moyes, Holley [134],
Moe, Jeanne [168], [107], [204] [136]
[233], [281], [286] Morehart, Christopher Mrozowski, Stephen
Mohlenhoff, Kathryn [101], [230] [247], [327]
[10] Morell-Hart, Shanti Msimanga, Muzi [180]
Mohr, Katelyn [92] [76], [163] Mt. Joy, Kristen [232]
Mol, Angus A. A. [83] Morello Repetto, Flavia Muller, Samantha [204]
Molinar, Marissa [73] [153], [155], [283] Mullin, John [281]
Molloy, Paula [291] Moreno Zapata, Paula Mullins, Danny [92]
Monaghan, George Patricia [100] Mullins, Patrick [68],
[133] Morer, Ignacio [146] [165], [240], [295]
Monahan, Eilis [146] Morett Alatorre, Luis Mullins, Paul [166]
Monnier, Gilliane [137] [59] Mundt, Jessica [326]
Monroe, Cara [14], Moretti, John [182], Munger, Tressa [223]
[143] [188] Munkittrick, Jessica
Monroe, J. Cameron Moretti-Langholtz, [88]
[286], [337b] Danielle [255] Munoz, Cynthia [153]
Monroy-Rios, Emiliano Morey, Darcy [212] Munson, Jessica [101],
[330] Morgan, Brooke [124] [302]
Montero, Gabriela Morgan, Christopher Muntz, Alice [81]
[285] [174] Murakami, Tatsuya
Montgomery, Barbara Morgan, Michele [322] [152], [262]
[325] Morgan, Robert [106] Murphy, A. Reginald
Montgomery, Lindsay Morgan-Smith, Mary [208]
[259] [170] Murphy, Beau [190]
Montgomery, Rebekah Moriarty, Ellen [168], Murphy, Melissa [100],
[17] [301] [169]
Montón-Subías, Moriarty, Matthew Murphy, Nell [322]
Sandra [275] [168], [301] Murphy, Shaun [303]
Mooney, Dawn Elise Moritz, Mark [283] Murphy, Timothy [38],
[277] Moriya, Toru [18] [214]
282 Program of the 83rd Annual Meeting
***Note: The numbers in the index refer to session numbers instead of page numbers.
AECOM’
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