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Patty Jo Watson papers

Natural History Museum

Patty Jo Watson lecturing on cave archaeology at Mammoth Cave National Park, June 21, 1982
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Finding aid
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Object Details

sova.naa.2004-26
GUID
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nw378f69dcb-9bd5-4645-b1a2-b0581d48b040
Creator
Watson, Patty Jo, 1932-
Place
Mammoth Cave National Park (Ky.)
Salts Cave (Ky.)
Iran
Jarmo Site (Iraq)
Girikihaciyan Site (Turkey)
Green River (Ky.)
Topic
Archaeology
Ethnoarchaeology
Provenance
These papers were donated to the National Anthropological Archives by Patty Jo Watson.
Creator
Watson, Patty Jo, 1932-
Culture
Kurds
Archaic Tradition (archaeological culture)
See more items in
Patty Jo Watson papers
Sponsor
Funding for the processing of this collection was provided by the American Women's History Initiative
Summary
Patty Jo Watson is an American archaeologist and professor emerita of archaeology at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri. Though her early career focused on the archaeological study of the ancient Near East, Watson is most well-known for her work on Pre-Columbian Native Americans, particularly in Kentucky's Mammoth Cave area. This collection consists of her professional papers, including articles, correspondence, fieldnotes, illustrations, grant applications, and manuscripts. The materials document Watson's ethnographic research in Iran and her archaeological excavations in Iraq, Turkey, and Mammoth Cave National Park in Kentucky. Also included are her graduate student notes and papers from the University of Chicago and her teaching materials from Washington University in St. Louis.
Biographical Note
Patty Jo Watson is a world-renowned archaeologist and professor emerita at Washington University who worked in both the Old and New World, focusing on the origins of agricultural cultivation. She has made major contributions in archaeological method, practice, and theory, developing a new technique in flotation which is both more efficient and more effective than other systems (Neuman, 15) and advocating for the use of ethnoarchaeology and the scientific method, in support of which she wrote Explanation in Archeology: An Explicitly Scientific Approach with Steven LeBlanc and Charles Redman. She is known for interdisciplinary methods, working with paleoethnobotanists, geologists, zoologists, biological anthropologists, and agricultural experts. Her work in Mammoth Cave National Park helped to redefine our understanding of plant cultivation in the New World and turned her into a world-renowned expert in cave archaeology. She was also a pioneer in the study of plant remains, obtaining results in the 1960s in a field that was not popularized until the 1980s (B.). Watson was born Patty Jo Andersen in Superior, Nebraska, in 1932 and grew up in Sheffield, Iowa. She developed an interest in archaeology after reading Agatha Christie's Come Tell Me How You Live (1946) but did not immediately pursue it. She attended Iowa State College as a premed student majoring in zoology (1950-1952). In her second year, she decided that she did not want to practice medicine and chose instead to attend a premaster's program in Anthropology at the University of Chicago. As a result, she never received a Bachelor's degree but was awarded Master's and Doctoral degrees (in 1956 and 1959 respectively). She married her high school sweetheart, Richard "Red" Watson, in 1955. He gave her caving gear as a wedding present, which led to her career in cave archaeology. While at the University of Chicago, Watson studied under Robert Braidwood. Her first fieldwork (other than her field school at Point of Pines) was on his Iraq-Jarmo project, where Braidwood put her in charge of the soundings at Banahilk, accompanied by some experienced local workers who helped her to gain her footing (Zagros Flanks, 545). The Iraq-Jarmo project focused on the origins of food production, both the cultivation of plants and domestication of animals. In addition to inspiring her lifelong interest in the development of plant cultivation, Braidwood's methods taught Watson the value of interdisciplinary teams, ethnological work in the archaeological discipline, and a scientific approach (Constantin, 16-17). Her second trip to the Near East (1959-1960) was to Iran, where undertook an ethnoarchaeological study. Watson continued her association with the Oriental Institute at the University of Chicago through the 1960s, conducting her final Near Eastern fieldwork in 1968 and 1970 at Girikihaciyan, a Halfian village in Turkey, as part of the Joint Prehistoric Project, Istanbul-Chicago, under the direction of Braidwood and Halet Çambel of the University of Istanbul. Watson had already begun the transition to New World archaeology at this point. In 1963 she became the director of the Cave Research Foundation Archeological Project. She conducted extensive fieldwork in Salts Cave as well as other caves in Mammoth Cave National Park and at shell mounds on the nearby Green River over the course of the next forty years. She fully transitioned to work in the United States because it was becoming increasingly difficult to work in southwestern Asia. Despite the shift in the location of her work, Watson maintained her interest in the development of agricultural cultivation, adding the study of prehistoric mining. Her work in the caves of the Mammoth-Flint Ridge Cave system and in the Shell Mound Archaeological Project resulted in the discovery that prehistoric Eastern Woodlands peoples had begun cultivating plants before the methods made their way into the southwestern United States from Mexico. Watson also did a small amount of research in the Southwest, codirecting the Cibola Archaeological Research Project (1972-1974), which focused on a pueblo site connected to the Zuni Nation, studying pottery production. This work has been continued by Arizona State University under the name Cibola Prehistory Project. The final region in which Watson did fieldwork was China. Her work there was as a consultant to the Xiaolangdi Dam Salvage Archaeology Project at Bancun village between 1991 and 1994. Her expertise in flotation techniques was valuable there as China did not, at the time, have a tradition of excavating the remains of flora and fauna (Peavy, 1). Watson taught briefly at Los Angeles State College, the University of Southern California, the University of California – Los Angeles, and the University of Michigan. Her husband began teaching at Washington University in 1964, but the University did not have an anthropology program until 1968; she began teaching there in 1969. Both she and Red remained at Washington University until 2004. Watson has supported increasing the role of women in the field of archaeology and chaired the American Anthropological Society's Committee to Study the Academic Employment of Women in Anthropology from 1983 to 1994. She has also advocated for the expansion of the field in other ways, working to enroll Native American students and to include foreign students in the program at Washington University and fostering ties with international programs (PJW reconstructs the past, 3). Watson has received recognition for her work from numerous professional organizations including Washington University in St. Louis, the Society for American Archaeology, the American Anthropological Association, the Archaeological Institute of America, the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the National Academy of Sciences, the National Speleological Society, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Public Broadcasting System, the American Philosophical Society, Discover magazine, the Academy of Science of St. Louis, and the Karst Waters Institute. Sources Consulted American Anthropological Association. "Honoring Service and Achievement." Anthropology Newsletter, November 20-24, 1996. American Philosophical Society. Autumn General Meeting, November 10-11, 2000: Biographical Essays of the Moderators, Speakers, Inductees, and Award Recipients, 2000. Aronson, Debby. "Patty Jo Watson reconstructs the past." Record, Washington University in St. Louis 18, no. 11 (November 4, 1993): 3. B., A. "About Alumni." University of Chicago Magazine 95, issue 5 (June 2003). https://magazine.uchicago.edu/0306/alumni/vitae.shtml Baker, Martha K. "Paying Tribute: A Marriage of Art and Science." Arts and Sciences Washington University in St. Louis, January 2004. Bertelson, Christine. "Woman of Science: Patty Jo Watson traces her career back to an Agatha Christie book." St. Louis Post Dispatch, July 19, 1988. Constantin, M. M. "She Tells Us How They Lived." Washington University Magazine, Spring 1990. Dalton, Blair. "Archaeological digs uncover pottery, politics." Student Life, October 9, 1973. "Early and Watson are inducted as AAAS fellows." Record, Washington University in St. Louis 22, no. 6 (October 2, 1997): 1, 7. Eavy, Tara. "Patty Jo Watson." Accessed November 29, 2023. https://msu-anthropology.github.io/deoa-ss16/watson/watson.html "Interview with Pat and Red Watson." Cave Research Foundation 18, no. 1 (February 1990): 12-14. Madrigal, T. Cregg. "Patty Jo Watson," Trowelblazers. Accessed November 28, 2023. https://trowelblazers.com/2015/09/23/patty-jo-watson/ McGinn, Susan Killenberg. "Watson among 'The 50 Most Important Women in Science." Record, Washington University in St. Louis 27, no. 14 (December 6, 2002): 1, 5. Neuman, Marcia. "History: Handle with Care." Washington University Magazine, December 1980. Nicholson, Ann, and Linda Sage. "Honors: Frieden, Watson to receive faculty achievement awards." Record, Washington University in St. Louis 24, no. 28 (April 20, 2000): 1-2. Peavy, Linda. "The Modern West Links with the Ancient East." Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, Arts & Sciences 6, no. 1 (Fall 1992): 1. Sage, Linda. "Passageways to the Past." Washington University, St. Louis, Missouri, Arts & Sciences 2, no. 2 (Fall 1988): 3. Svitil, Kathy A. "50 Most Important Women in Science." Discover 23 no. 11 (November 2002): 52-57. Voices: Faculty in the College of Arts and Sciences. "Patty Jo Watson: Edward Mallinckrodt Distinguished University Professor," Fall 1996. Washington University in St. Louis. "Patty Jo Watson: Edward Mallinckrodt Distinguished University Professor Emerita of Archaeology." Department of Anthropology. Accessed December 18, 2023. https://anthropology.wustl.edu/people/patty-jo-watson Washington University Magazine. "Lasting Lessons: Patty Jo Watson, The Edward Mallinckrodt Distinguished University Professor, Department of Anthropology," Summer 1996. Chronology 1932 April 26 -- Born in Superior, Nebraska 1950-1952 -- Attended Iowa State College 1954-1955 -- Archaeological field assistant, Iraq-Jarmo Project of the Oriental Institute, University of Chicago 1956 -- MA from the University of Chicago in Anthropology 1958 Summer -- Field research in plant ecology in the Chuska Mountains, New Mexico, geological and palynological expedition directed by H. E. Wright, University of Minnesota 1959 -- PhD from the University of Chicago in Anthropology 1959-1960 -- Archaeologist and ethnographer, Iranian Prehistoric Project, Oriental Institute, University of Chicago 1961 -- Instructor in Anthropology at Los Angeles State College Instructor in Anthropology at the University of Southern California Instructor in Anthropology at the University of California, Los Angeles 1962-1963 -- Lecturer in Anthropology at the University of Michigan 1963-2004 -- Director of the Cave Research Foundation Archeological Project 1964 -- Research Associate, Oriental Institute, University of Chicago 1965-1967 -- Project Associate and Unit Director, Anthropology Curriculum Study Project, American Anthropological Association 1967 -- Research Associate, Oriental Institute, University of Chicago 1968 and 1970 -- Archaeologist, Turkish Prehistoric Project, Oriental Institute, University of Chicago and Istanbul University 1969-1970 -- Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Washington University, St. Louis 1970-1973 -- Associate Professor of Anthropology at Washington University, St. Louis 1971-1972 -- Acting Chair of Anthropology at Washington University, St. Louis 1972-1974 -- Co-Director (with Steven A. LeBlanc and Charles L. Redman) of the Cibola Archeological Research Project 1972-2005 -- Co-Director (with William H. Marquardt) of the Shell Mound Archeological Project 1973-1976 -- Editor for Western Asia, Current Research, American Antiquity 1973-1977 -- Editor for archaeology, American Anthropologist 1973-1985 -- Member of the Scientific Board, Association Paleorient 1973-1993 -- Professor of Anthropology at Washington University, St. Louis 1974 -- Member of the National Academy of Sciences Review Panel for National Science Foundation graduate study grants in Anthropology 1974-1976 -- Member of the Executive Committee, Society for American Archaeology Member of the National Science Advisory Panel in Anthropology 1974-1977 -- Associate editor for archaeology, American Anthropologist 1975 -- Chair, Nominations Committee, Society of American Archaeology 1975-1977 -- Member of the Committee for the Recovery of Archaeological Remains 1975-1979 -- Member of the Program Committee, Archaeological Institute of America 1977-1980 -- Member of the National Endowment for the Humanities Advisory Panel for General Research Grants in Archaeology 1978 -- Chair of the Nominating Committee, Southeastern Archaeological Conference 1978-1980 -- Member of the Executive Committee, Association for Field Archaeology 1979-2007 -- Editor for Anthropology, National Speleological Society Bulletin 1980-1983 -- Member of the Editorial Board, Association for Field Archaeology 1981 July -- Member of the Scientific Committee, VIIIth International Speleological Conference, Bowling Green, Kentucky 1982-1984 -- Chair of Anthropology at Washington University, St. Louis Member of the Executive Committee, Society for American Archaeology 1982-1985 -- Representative from the Society for American Archaeology to the American Association for the Advancement of Science 1983-1994 -- Chair of the Committee to Study the Academic Employment of Women in Anthropology, American Anthropological Association 1983-before 2014 -- Member of the Governing Board for Savage Cave, Murray State University, Murray, Kentucky 1984-1987 -- Editor, American Antiquity 1984-2004 -- Member of the Board of Directors, Center for American Archaeology, Kampsville, Illinois 1989-1990 -- President, Kentucky Organization of Professional Archaeologists 1990 -- Awarded the Fryxell Medal for Distinguished Contributions to Interdisciplinary Research in Archaeology by the Society for American Archaeology Chair of the Nominations Committee, Society of American Archaeology 1991 March 13-16 -- Chair of the Program and Local Arrangements, Fourteenth Annual Meeting, Society of Ethnobiology, St. Louis 1991-1992 -- Chair of Section H, American Association for the Advancement of Science 1991-1995 -- Chair of the Publications Committee, Society for American Archaeology 1993-1994 -- Member of the Fryxell Award Committee, Society for American Archaeology 1993-2004 -- Edward Mallinckrodt Distinguished University Professor of Anthropology at Washington University, St. Louis 1994 -- Named Distinguished Lecturer by the American Anthropological Association 1994-1995 -- Chair of the Fryxell Award Committee, Society for American Archaeology 1996 -- Awarded the Distinguished Service Award by the American Anthropological Association 1998-2001 -- Member of the Book Award Committee, Society for American Archaeology 1999 -- Awarded the Gold Medal for Distinguished Archaeological Achievement by the Archaeological Institute of America 1999-2001 -- Chair of the Fund Raising Committee, Society for American Archaeology 1999-2005 -- Academic Trustee, Governing Board, Archaeological Institute of America 2000 -- Awarded the Arthur Holly Compton Faculty Achievement Award by Washington University, St. Louis 2002 -- Awarded the Peter Raven Award for Lifetime Achievement by the Academy of Science of St. Louis 2003 -- Awarded the Outstanding Achievement in Karst Sciences Award by the Karst Waters Institute 2003-circa 2018 -- Affiliate of the Department of Anthropology at the University of Montana, Missoula 2004 -- Awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Southeastern Archaeological Conference 2004-current -- Edward Mallinckrodt Distinguished University Professor of Anthropology Emerita at Washington University, St. Louis 2007 -- Awarded the Pomerance Award for Scientific Contributions to Archaeology by the Archaeological Institute of America 2009 -- Granted an Honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters by Washington University, St. Louis 2010 -- Awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Society for American Archaeology
Extent
20.83 Linear feet (31 document boxes, 3 shoeboxes, 1 oversize box, 3 map folders, 1 map roll, and 1 restricted box)
1 Videocassettes (VHS)
Date
1948-2010
Archival Repository
National Anthropological Archives
Identifier
NAA.2004-26
Type
Collection descriptions
Archival materials
Videocassettes (vhs)
Citation
Patty Jo Watson papers, National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution
Arrangement
This collection is arranged in 3 series: (1) Research, 1954-2002; (2) Professional Activities, 1955-2010; and (3) Education, 1948-1963.
Processing Information
Watson's papers were rehoused in acid free folders and boxes. Reprints and photocopies of printed materials were removed unless they were annotated by Watson. Post-it notes were photocopied onto acid free paper and then removed. Paper clips and staples were removed; if the relationship between the newly separated papers was not clear, they were grouped together within a folded sheet of acid free paper. Loose papers were grouped into folders by the archivist based on content. Titles in square brackets were supplied by the archivist; the contents of these folders may have been loose in a box or may have been in unlabeled folders. Abbreviations in titled folders have been expanded for clarity. Processed and encoded by Katherine Christensen, January 2024.
Rights
Contact the repository for terms of use.
Selected Bibliography
1956. "New Material from Northern Iraq: the Halaf 'Period' Reconsidered." MA thesis, University of Chicago. 1959. "Early Village Farming in the Levant and its Environment." PhD diss., University of Chicago. 1969. -- The Prehistory of Salts Cave, Kentucky -- . Springfield: Illinois State Museum. 1971. with Steven A. LeBlanc and Charles L. Redman. -- Explanation in Archeology: An Explicitly Scientific Approach -- . New York: Columbia University Press. 1974. (ed.) -- Archeology of the Mammoth Cave Area -- . New York: Academic Press. 1979. -- Archaeological Ethnology in Western Iran -- . Viking Fund Publications in Anthropology 57. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. 1983. (eds.) with Linda S. Braidwood, Robert J. Braidwood, Bruce Howe, and Charles A. Reed. -- Prehistoric Archaeology Along the Zagros Flanks -- . Chicago: Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago. 1990. with Steven A. LeBlanc. -- Girikihaciyan: A Halafian Site in Southeastern Turkey -- . Los Angeles: Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles. 1992. (eds.) with C. Wesley Cowan. -- The Origins of Agriculture: An International Perspective -- . Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press. 1995. "Explaining the Transition to Agriculture." In -- Last Hunters-First Farmers -- , edited by D. Price and A. Gebauer, 21-37. Santa Fe: School of American Research. 1995. "Archaeology, Anthropology, and the Culture Concept." -- American Anthropologist -- 97: 683-694. 1996. (eds.) with Kenneth Carstens. -- Of Caves and Shell Mounds -- . Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. 1999. "From the Hilly Flanks of the Fertile Crescent to the Eastern Woodlands of North America." In -- Grit-Tempered: Early Women Archaeologists in the Southeastern United States -- , edited by N. M. White, L. P. Sullivan, and R. A. Marrinan, 286-297. Gainesville: University of Florida Press. 1999. "Ethnographic Analogy and Ethnoarchaeology." In -- Archaeology, History and Culture in Palestine and the Near East: Essays in Memory of Albert E. Glock -- , edited by T. Kapitan, 47-65. American Schools of Oriental Research, ASOR Books 3. Atlanta: Scholar's Press 2001. "Origins of Food Production." In -- International Encyclopedia of the Social and Behavioral Sciences -- , edited by N. Smelser and P. Baltes. Amsterdam: Pergamon (Elsevier Science). 2005. (eds.) with William Marquardt. -- Archaeology of the Middle Green River Region, Kentucky -- . Gainesville: Institute of Archaeology and Paleoenvironmental Studies, University of Florida.
Scope and Contents
This collection consists of the professional papers of archaeologist Patty Jo Watson. The collection is comprised of articles, correspondence, fieldnotes, illustrations, grant applications, and manuscripts documenting Watson's ethnographic research in Iran in three Kurdish villages, as well as her archaeological work in Iraq, Turkey, and Mammoth Cave National Park in Kentucky. There is little information included regarding her work in the Cibola Archaeological Research Project, as these materials are housed at Arizona State University. Also included are her graduate student notes and papers from the University of Chicago and her teaching materials from Washington University in St. Louis. The materials related to her education, teaching, writings, and professional organizations are incomplete as some of these materials are housed at Washington University in St. Louis. Of particular interest are letters which she wrote to her then fiancé Red Watson during her first field season (1954-1955) at Banahilk in Iraq, which contain observations on the people of the region as well as the work she conducted there; her logbooks, which contain an account of her work in the southeastern United States; and the "Patty Jo Watson doll" given to Watson by students at Flinders University in Australia when she gave a lecture there.
Sensitivity Statement
Please note that the contents of the collection and the language and terminology used reflect the context and culture of the time of its creation. As an historical document, its contents may be at odds with contemporary views and terminology and considered offensive today. The information within this collection does not reflect the views of the Smithsonian Institution or National Anthropological Archives but is available in its original form to facilitate research.
Restrictions
Materials containing personally identifiable information, references, and grant reviews have been restricted for eighty years from their date of creation. Computer disks are restricted. Please contact the repository for information on the availability of access copies. Access to the Patty Jo Watson papers requires an appointment.
Related Materials
The Mammoth Cave National Park holds artifacts from Salts Cave. Arizona State University holds research, faunal specimens, and ceramic artifacts from the Cibola Archaeological Research Project (CARP). Materials from CARP can also be found in the Digital Archaeological Record. Washington University in St. Louis holds The Patty Jo Watson papers. The National Anthropological Archives holds the Carol Kramer papers, the Maxine R. Kleindienst papers, and the Patty Jo Watson collection on Walter Taylor.
NAA.2004-26
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/nw378f69dcb-9bd5-4645-b1a2-b0581d48b040
NAA.2004-26
NAA
Record ID
ebl-1657903500747-1657903501017-0

Showing 584 result(s)

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  • Patty Jo Watson papers 584 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 1: Research / 1.2: The Near East / Iraq / Banahilk / [Artifact drawings and descriptions] 42 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 2: Professional activities / 2.3: Correspondence 31 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 2: Professional activities / 2.5: Lectures and conferences 29 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 2: Professional activities / 2.8: Writings / Writings by Watson 21 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 3: Education / University of Chicago / Anthropology 20 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 1: Research / 1.2: The Near East / Iran / Ethnoarchaeology 19 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 1: Research / 1.3: The United States / The Southeast / Log books 18 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 2: Professional activities / 2.2: Diplomas, certificates, and awards 13 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 2: Professional activities / 2.6: Professional organizations / Society for American Archaeology (SAA) 13 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 2: Professional activities / 2.6: Professional organizations 12 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 2: Professional activities / 2.7: Washington University / Courses 12 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 2: Professional activities / 2.6: Professional organizations / American Anthropological Association (AAA) 11 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 1: Research / 1.1: China 10 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 1: Research / 1.2: The Near East 9 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 1: Research / 1.3: The United States / The Southeast / Mammoth Cave National Park 9 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 1: Research / 1.3: The United States / The Southeast / Mammoth Cave National Park / Cave Research Foundation 9 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 1: Research / 1.2: The Near East / Turkey / Girikihaciyan 8 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 1: Research / 1.3: The United States / The Southeast / Mammoth Cave National Park / Salts Cave 8 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 2: Professional activities 8 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 2: Professional activities / 2.1: Biographical 8 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 2: Professional activities / 2.8: Writings / Writings by Watson / Explanation in Archaeology 8 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 1: Research / 1.2: The Near East / Turkey / Girikihaciyan / Maps 7 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
  • Patty Jo Watson papers / Series 1: Research / 1.3: The United States / The Southeast 7 Filter by term plus Exclude term minus
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Clear facet(s):

Excluded:

  • Remove Resource Type: Videocassettes (vhs) close
  • Society for American Archaeology publications committee – response to back issues offer (American Antiquity)

  • Society for American Archaeology – Scarry symposium

  • Tell Shimshara, Iraq

  • Shell mound archaeological project – midwest conference paper 1980

  • China [prints]

  • Reviews in anthropology

  • Committee on Scholarly Communication with China – March 6, 1993 meeting

  • Turkey

  • [Edward Mallinckrodt medal]

  • 1991 Chinese archaeology ①

  • Girikihaciyan – van Zeist

  • [McClung DeTapia archaeobotanical charts and maps of Mesoamerica]

  • [Australia – second trip]

  • [Anthropology 340]: Redfield seminar – methods in cultural anthropology

  • Jarmo/Jericho

  • Evolution – 380

  • Jarmo architecture

  • [Nance, Jack D.]

  • Fryxell symposium papers 1990 (partial set)

  • School of American Research II – [shipwrecks as anthropology]

  • Smithsonian Tropica Research Institute – Piperno

  • Maps

  • First National Geographic Society proposal

  • Jarmo plant remains – note


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