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Hopewell Settlement Patterns, Subsistence, and Symbolic Landscapes - by A Martin Byers & Deeanne Wymer (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Examining the meaning of the Ohio Hopewell monumental earthworks within the societies that built themWere the builders of the famous earthworks and mounds of the Middle Ohio Valley, people we today call Ohio Hopewell, residentially mobile or sedentary populations?
- About the Author: A. Martin Byers taught anthropology and archaeology for thirty years at Vanier College, Montreal, and is now a research associate at McGill University.
- 422 Pages
- Social Science, Archaeology
Description
About the Book
This volume address important questions about the ancient societies of the Middle Ohio Valley by examining the cultural and social nature of the Ohio Hopewell monumental earthworks.Book Synopsis
Examining the meaning of the Ohio Hopewell monumental earthworks within the societies that built them
Were the builders of the famous earthworks and mounds of the Middle Ohio Valley, people we today call Ohio Hopewell, residentially mobile or sedentary populations? What role and meaning did Hopewell earthworks play within these ancient societies? Ultimately, can they teach us anything or help us see things anew?
This collection of essays addresses important questions, like these and others, by examining the cultural and social nature of the well-known Ohio Hopewell monumental earthworks. Scholars discuss the purpose, meaning, and role of earthworks and other artifacts, theorizing on how they may have reflected political, social, and practical ecological organization.
Presented in a unique "dialogical" structure, this series of open conversations and debates about divergent archaeological practices provides a unique opportunity for the contributors to directly assess their colleagues' various approaches to studying these ancient communities.
Contributors: Lauren
Sieg Douglas K. Charles Robert V. Riordan Paul Pacheco Jarrod Burks Robert
Horn Warren Deboer Deeanne Wymer John E. Hancock Bradley T. Lepper A.
Martin Byers N'omi B. Greber Ray M. Hively
Review Quotes
"This volume should be read by all researchers interested in the
Hopewell phenomenon, but the theoretical perspectives and dialogues
contained within have implications and applications well beyond the
geographic and temporal focus of the book."--Southeastern Archaeology
About the Author
A. Martin Byers taught anthropology and archaeology for thirty years at Vanier College, Montreal, and is now a research associate at McGill University. He is the author of The Ohio Hopewell Episode: Paradigm Lost, Paradigm Gained and Cahokia: A World Renewal Cult Heterarchy. DeeAnne Wymer is professor of anthropology at Bloomsburg University and her work on paleoethnobotany has been widely published over the past twenty years.