Its About Time: Contributions in Honor of Thomas C. Windes
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 80th Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA (2015)
Thomas C. Windes has been a prominent archaeologist in the American Southwest for the past forty years. He has produced seminal works on the prehistory of Chaco Canyon and has devoted immense amounts of time and energy to dendrochronological research from northern Mexico to southern Utah. But perhaps most important, he has been a generous and influential mentor to young archaeologists. This symposium recognizes Tom's achievements and acknowledges the profound impact that he has had on the development of a generation of professional archaeologists.
Other Keywords
Chaco Canyon •
Chaco •
Dendrochronology •
Gallina •
Dendroarchaeology •
kiva •
Ceramics •
Agriculture •
Architecture •
Historic Preservation
Geographic Keywords
North America - Southwest
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-15 of 15)
- Documents (15)
- Architectural Wood Use in Chaco Kivas (2015)
- Beyond the Dates: Reconstructing the Social Histories of Southeastern Utah Cliff Dwellings with Tom Windes (2015)
- Chaco Legacy Studies: Archival Research, Archeomagnetic Dating, and the Role of Turkeys (2015)
- An Examination of Gallina Utility Ware: Vessel Morphology and Function (2015)
- Friends in High Places: Windes, Shrines, and Lines of Sight (2015)
- Methods for the Analysis of Structural Wood and Some Examples from NW Mexico – A Paper in Honor of Tomas C. Windes (2015)
- The Social Value of Ornaments from Pueblo Bonito and Aztec Ruin (2015)
- Still High on Pueblo Alto: Tom Windes’ Mounds of Accomplishment (2015)
- Tom Windes and Southwestern Dendroarchaeology (2015)
- Tom Windes: Celebrating 40 Years of Innovative Research on the Colorado Plateau. (2015)
- Tracing the Growth of Historic Preservation in the U.S. and the Arc of Tom Windes’s Career (2015)
- Tree-Ring Dating the Gallina: The herb dick collections and Beyond (2015)
- Windes Matters (2015)
- Windes Was Here (2015)
- Woodrats Rule! Climbing and Coring in Southeast Utah Cliff Dwellings (2015)