Great Excavations: Tales of Early Southwestern Archaeology, 1888-1939, School of American Research Press, 1995

Great Excavations: Tales of Early Southwestern Archaeology, 1 888-1939, is an "intentionally selective" account of eight major archaeological expeditions to the Southwest in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It succeeds in achieving the goals set f...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Stephen E. Nash
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 1997-05-01
Series:Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
Online Access:http://www.archaeologybulletin.org/article/view/339
id doaj-0d14a79fd7354186b5816e898906f442
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0d14a79fd7354186b5816e898906f4422020-11-25T01:35:41ZengUbiquity PressBulletin of the History of Archaeology1062-47402047-69301997-05-0171232510.5334/bha.07109337Great Excavations: Tales of Early Southwestern Archaeology, 1888-1939, School of American Research Press, 1995Stephen E. Nash0Department of Anthropology, The University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, D.S.A. 85721Great Excavations: Tales of Early Southwestern Archaeology, 1 888-1939, is an "intentionally selective" account of eight major archaeological expeditions to the Southwest in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It succeeds in achieving the goals set forth in the prologue. The reader is taken on an "armchair tour"  of early Southwestern excavations in the hope that the resulting "basic understanding of what the early archae­ologists did" will stimulate a desire to "learn more about the intriguing prehistory of the Southwest" (pp. xiii). As a student of the history of North American archaeology, I would be amiss to speak for Elion's "layperson" audience, but my suspicion is that her presentation will indeed stimulate those readers. As an archaeologist, I thoroughly enjoyed this book, and it may well be that Elliott's journalistic approach makes this book more enjoyable because she is able to remain above the level of detail that often burden archaeolo­gists' accounts of these expeditions. I must temper this statement by noting that Elliott's journalistic hyper­ bole and tendency to oversimplify complex research and analysis are at times discomforting. http://www.archaeologybulletin.org/article/view/339
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stephen E. Nash
spellingShingle Stephen E. Nash
Great Excavations: Tales of Early Southwestern Archaeology, 1888-1939, School of American Research Press, 1995
Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
author_facet Stephen E. Nash
author_sort Stephen E. Nash
title Great Excavations: Tales of Early Southwestern Archaeology, 1888-1939, School of American Research Press, 1995
title_short Great Excavations: Tales of Early Southwestern Archaeology, 1888-1939, School of American Research Press, 1995
title_full Great Excavations: Tales of Early Southwestern Archaeology, 1888-1939, School of American Research Press, 1995
title_fullStr Great Excavations: Tales of Early Southwestern Archaeology, 1888-1939, School of American Research Press, 1995
title_full_unstemmed Great Excavations: Tales of Early Southwestern Archaeology, 1888-1939, School of American Research Press, 1995
title_sort great excavations: tales of early southwestern archaeology, 1888-1939, school of american research press, 1995
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
issn 1062-4740
2047-6930
publishDate 1997-05-01
description Great Excavations: Tales of Early Southwestern Archaeology, 1 888-1939, is an "intentionally selective" account of eight major archaeological expeditions to the Southwest in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. It succeeds in achieving the goals set forth in the prologue. The reader is taken on an "armchair tour"  of early Southwestern excavations in the hope that the resulting "basic understanding of what the early archae­ologists did" will stimulate a desire to "learn more about the intriguing prehistory of the Southwest" (pp. xiii). As a student of the history of North American archaeology, I would be amiss to speak for Elion's "layperson" audience, but my suspicion is that her presentation will indeed stimulate those readers. As an archaeologist, I thoroughly enjoyed this book, and it may well be that Elliott's journalistic approach makes this book more enjoyable because she is able to remain above the level of detail that often burden archaeolo­gists' accounts of these expeditions. I must temper this statement by noting that Elliott's journalistic hyper­ bole and tendency to oversimplify complex research and analysis are at times discomforting.
url http://www.archaeologybulletin.org/article/view/339
work_keys_str_mv AT stephenenash greatexcavationstalesofearlysouthwesternarchaeology18881939schoolofamericanresearchpress1995
_version_ 1725067057123295232