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008 230614b1983 us ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _aBO-LpMNE
041 _aeng
092 _sE
_aAMER-ANT/vol.48(2)/ Apr.1983
100 1 _aGraves, Michael W.
245 _aGrowth and aggregation at canyon creek ruin:
_bimplications for evolutionary change in east central Arizona.
_cMichael W. Graves
260 _aEstados Unidos-US :
_bSociety for American Archaeology,
_c1983.
300 _a290-315 páginas:
_bilustraciones blanco y negro
310 _aTrimestral
362 _avol.48; n.1 (Jan.1983)
490 _3American Antiquity. Journal of the Society for American Archaeology ;
_ano.1
520 _aTree ring data from the Cayon Creek Ruin, east central Arizona, are analyzed to evaluate two competing interpretations of pueblo growth at this well preserved cliff dwelling. Despite an anamalous dating pattern, a logistic model best describes pueblo growth at this well preserved clif dwelling. Despite an anomalous dating pattern, a logistic model best describes pueblo growth. Room construction activity in linked to population increase, which in turn, may be divides into two varieties: natural increase, and inmigration of households into the settlement. Logistic growth also accounts for population increase within the larger area of the Grasshopper region. I review the processes promoting both local and regional population increase, as well as subsequent abandonment of the mountains of Arizona. I suggest that rapid depopulation may have ocurred after A.D. 1375 because late prehistoric communities lost access to nonlocal goods that had previously allowed opulations to increase beyond local resource constraints.
653 _aARQUEOLOGIA
653 _aASENTAMIENTOS HUMANOS
773 0 _0302724
_976746
_aSociety for American Archaeology
_dEstados Unidos-US : Society for American Archaeology, 1983.
_oHEMREV012694
_tAmerican Antiquity. Journal of the Society for American Archaeology;
_w(BO-LP-MUSEF)MUSEF-HEM-PPE-091270
850 _aBO-LpMNE
866 _a1
942 _2ddc
_cPPE
_dCON
_j011
999 _c302732