The Managed Mosaic: Papers in Honor of Scott L. Fedick
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 80th Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA (2015)
For the last thirty years, Scott Fedick's research has changed the way that we view how the ancient Maya engaged in agriculture and managed forest resources. He is also the epitome of how to conduct collaborative and interdisciplinary research. This session includes the "managed mosaic" of Fedick's career: a number of his current and former students, mentors and collaborators, who will present on their research as part of the Yalahau Regional Human Ecology Project, and the way in which Fedick has informed and influenced their work.
Other Keywords
Maya •
Paleoethnobotany •
Maya archaeology •
Scott Fedick •
Mexico •
Paleoenvironments •
Architecture •
Rock Alignments •
Lithic •
Historical Archaeology
Geographic Keywords
Mesoamerica •
Central America
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-11 of 11)
- Documents (11)
- Beyond the Death March: Scott Fedick´s Legacy as a Field School Director (2015)
- Debt Peonage and Free Labor: Post–Caste War Sites in Northern Quintana Roo and Western Belize (2015)
- An Ethnoarchaeological Approach to Understanding the Role of Root-crops in Ancient Lowland Maya Subsistence. (2015)
- Exploring the Coastal Mosaic of Northern Quintana Roo: The Proyecto Costa Escondida and Scott L. Fedick’s Continuing Legacy in the Northern Maya Lowlands (2015)
- Fedick-ian Approaches to Wetland Studies: Rock Alignments, Resilience, and the Pulse-Based Ecosystem (2015)
- Fedickschrift: Notes on a Prominent Historical Figure in Ethnoecology, Ethnoarchaeology, and Landscape Studies (2015)
- A Forgotten Facet of Fedick: Scott's Contributions to Maya Lithics Research (2015)
- Has anyone heard from Scott Fedick? (2015)
- Peopling the Landscape: Scott Fedick and his contributions to household subsistence strategies (2015)
- Preparing for the Future through Rock Mounds and Research (2015)
- Scott’s Snails: Freshwater and wetland gastropods as indicators of environmental change in the Yalahau Region, Quintana Roo, Mexico. (2015)