The Davis Ranch Site: A Kayenta Immigrant Enclave in Southeastern Arizona (Amerind Studies in Archaeology) - Hardcover

Book 19 of 27: Amerind Studies in Archaeology

Gerald, Rex E.

 
9780816538546: The Davis Ranch Site: A Kayenta Immigrant Enclave in Southeastern Arizona (Amerind Studies in Archaeology)

Synopsis


In this new volume, the results of Rex E. Gerald’s 1957 excavations at the Davis Ranch Site in southeastern Arizona’s San Pedro River Valley are reported in their entirety for the first time.

Annotations to Gerald’s original manuscript in the archives of the Amerind Museum and newly written material place Gerald’s work in the context of what is currently known regarding the late thirteenth-century Kayenta diaspora and the relationship between Kayenta immigrants and the Salado phenomenon. Data presented by Gerald and other contributors identify the site as having been inhabited by people from the Kayenta region of northeastern Arizona and southeastern Utah.

The results of Gerald’s excavations and Archaeology Southwest’s San Pedro Preservation Project (1990–2001) indicate that the people of the Davis Ranch Site were part of a network of dispersed immigrant enclaves responsible for the origin and spread of Roosevelt Red Ware pottery, the key material marker of the Salado phenomenon.

A companion volume to Charles Di Peso’s 1958 publication on the nearby Reeve Ruin, archaeologists working in the U.S. Southwest and other researchers interested in ancient population movements and their consequences will consider this work an essential case study.

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About the Author


Rex E. Gerald, who excavated the Davis Ranch Site as a predoctoral research fellow at the Amerind Foundation, was later director of the Centennial Museum and an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Texas at El Paso.

Patrick D. Lyons is the director of the Arizona State Museum and an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Arizona. He is co-editor of Migrants and Mounds: Classic Period Archaeology of the Lower San Pedro Valley.

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