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Wissler, C. 1917 The New Archaeology. American Museum Journal 17(2):100–101. 1942 The American Indian and the American Philosophical Society. American Philosophical Society Proceedings 86(1):189–204. Wister, F. A. 1922 Sara Yorke Stevenson. Civic Club of Philadelphia, Philadelphia. Wood, J. S., and D. R. Wilcox 2000 Where Did All the Flowers Go? Warfare and Religion in the Evolution of Hohokam Political Organization. Paper prepared for the Symposium on Hohokam Political Organization, organized by D. R. Abbott and D. R. Wilcox, 65th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Philadelphia, April 7, 2000. Worster, D. 2001 A River Running West: The Life of John Wesley Powell. Oxford University Press, New York. Wright, G. F. 1889 The Ice Age in North America and Its Bearing upon the Antiquity of Man. D. Appleton, New York. 1892 Man and the Glacial Period. D. Appleton, New York. Wyman, J. 1869 Report of the Curator. Second Annual Report of the Trustees of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, pp. 5–23. 1872 Report of the Curator. Fifth Annual Report of the Trustees of the Peabody Museum of American Archaeology and Ethnology, pp. 5–30. 230 References Contributors Lawrence E. Aten is retired from the National Park Service. He is a Research Fellow at the University of Texas, Austin, and currently is researching the life of Clarence B. Moore (in collaboration with J. T. Milanich) and the archaeology of the Sabine Lake area of Texas and Louisiana. His most recent monograph is “A Late Holocene Settlement in the Taylor Bayou Drainage Basin,” coauthored with C. N. Bollich (Texas Archaeological Society Special Publication no. 4, 2002). Steven Conn teaches cultural and intellectual history at Ohio State University. His ¤rst book, Museums and American Intellectual Life, 1876–1926, was published in 1998. His most recent book, Staring at the Past: Native Americans and the Problem of History, is forthcoming from the University of Chicago Press. Elin C. Danien is a Research Associate in the American Section of the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. She originated and for many years organized the Museum’s Annual Maya Weekend. Her most recent publication is A Guide to the Mesoamerican Gallery at the University of Pennsylvania Museum, following her renovation of that gallery. Regna Darnell is Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Centre for Research and Teaching of Canadian Languages at the University of Western Ontario. She is a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. Her most recent book is Invisible Genealogies: A History of Americanist Anthropology (University of Nebraska Press, 2001). Don D. Fowler is the Mamie Kleberg Professor of Historic Preservation and Anthropology at the University of Nevada, Reno. He is a past-president of the Society for American Archaeology. His most recent book is A Laboratory for Anthropology : Science and Romanticism in the American Southwest, 1846–1930 (University of New Mexico Press, 2000). Curtis M. Hinsley is Regent’s Professor of History in the Department of Applied Indigenous Studies at Northern Arizona University. He is currently editing , with David R. Wilcox, a multivolume documentary history of the Hemenway Southwestern Archaeological Expedition, 1886–1889. The second volume of the history, The Lost Itinerary of Frank Hamilton Cushing, is now available (University of Arizona Press, 2002). Alice Beck Kehoe is Professor of Anthropology Emerita at Marquette University . Her most recent books are The Land of Prehistory: A Critical History of American Archaeology (Routledge, 1998) and Shamans and Religion: an Anthropological Experiment in Critical Thinking (Waveland, 2000). Eleanor M. King is Professor of Anthropology at Howard University in Washington , D.C. She has a long-standing interest in the history of anthropology and has published on the early history of the University of Pennsylvania Museum as well as on the careers of some of its Americanist scholars. A certi¤ed archivist, she is coauthor of Preserving Field Records: Archival Techniques for Archaeologists and Anthropologists (University of Pennsylvania Museum, 1985) and has published articles on the importance of archival management speci¤cally for archaeology. Frances Joan Mathien, an archaeologist with the National Park Service, serves as general editor of the Chaco Project publications. Her recent contribution is an edited volume, Ceramics, Lithics, and Ornaments of Chaco Canyon: Analyses of Artifacts from the Chaco Project, 1971–1987 (National Park Service Publications in Archaeology 18G, 1997). David J. Meltzer is the Henderson/Morrison Professor of Prehistory at Southern Methodist University, Dallas. He has published extensively on Pleistocene peoples and environments of North America and...

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