Formative Influences: A Gathering in Honor of J. Scott Raymond
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 82nd Annual Meeting, Vancouver, BC (2017)
Over a lifetime of work in South America, Scott Raymond has greatly contributed to the archaeology of the neotropics. Beginning with his dissertation on the archaeology of the Upper Amazon of Peru, under the supervision of Donald Lathrap at the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana, Scott later moved his focus to the Valdivia culture of Early Formative Period Ecuador. During the span of his productive career his interests have included ceramic classification methodologies, the nature of subsistence systems, settlement patterns, and the social formations of Early Formative Ecuador. Friends, colleagues, and students of Scott will present on some of the ideas, research areas, and influences he has had on our discipline.
Other Keywords
Peru •
andes •
Ceramics •
Irrigation •
Historical Archaeology •
Plantation •
Zooarchaeology •
Plant Domestication •
Currency •
archaeobotany
Geographic Keywords
South America •
Department of Martinique (Country) •
Republic of El Salvador (Country) •
Department of Guadeloupe (Country) •
Antigua and Barbuda (Country) •
Belize (Country) •
Anguilla (Country) •
Republic of Guatemala (Country) •
Republic of Honduras (Country) •
St. Lucia (Country)
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-8 of 8)
- Documents (8)
- Colonization of Paradise: Historical Ecology and Archaeology of El Progreso Plantation, Galápagos (1870–1904) (2017)
- A Late Formative Period Site in Chimborazo Province, Ecuador (2017)
- Precolonial irrigation systems and settlement Patterns in the valley of Rimac - Peru. (2017)
- Really ugly Nasca pots of ancient Peru, and why they are important. (2017)
- Rethinking the Formative Stage: A reconsideration from two archaeological sites on the Colombian Caribbean lowlands (2017)
- The Secret Life of Cacao in the Ecuadorian Upper Amazon (2017)
- Sedentism and plant domestication: North west Amazonia (2017)
- Tokens of Oppression: Coinage at a Nineteenth-Century Galapagos Sugar Plantation (2017)