Description

Book Synopsis
Located off the west coast of the Mexican state of Baja California, Isla Cedros - Island of Fogs - is site to some of the most extensive and remarkable archaeological discoveries on the continent. Two sites dated to before 12,000 cal BP have been excavated, as well as portions of two large village sites dated to the last one thousand years. Among the artefacts discovered are the earliest fishhooks found on the continent. Drawing on ten years of his own historical, ethnographic, and archaeological research, Matthew Des Lauriers uses Isla Cedros to form hypotheses regarding the ecological, economic, and social nature of island societies. Des Lauriers uses a comparative framework in order to examine both the development and evolution of social structures among Pacific coast maritime hunter-gatherers as well as to track patterns of change. Because it examines the issue of whether human populations can intensively harvest natural resources without causing ecological collapse, Island of Fogs provides a relevant historical counterpart to modern discussions of ecological change and alternative models for sustainable development.

Trade Review

"I have followed Des Lauriers’ research with great interest over the last several years as he made remarkable find after find on the important, but very poorly understood, desert island.”—Torben Rick, Smithsonian Institution

"The book will make a significant and timely contribution to this very little studied Mexican region."—MarÍa L. Cruz-Torres, Arizona State University

"In what will hopefully be his first of many contributions to Baja California studies, Des Lauriers's Islands of Fogs greatly advances our understanding of the archaeology of Cedros Island, dispels inaccurate preconceptions about the Baja California peninsula, and in the process, contributes significant knowledge about the maritime prehistory of the New World. Arguably one of the most important studies from the region."—California Archaeology

Table of Contents

List of Figures
List of Maps
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1. A Place in Space and Time
Chapter 2. Islanders, Fishermen, Pirates, and Corporations
Chapter 3. The First IsleÑos
Chapter 4. Becoming Cedros
Chapter 5. The World of the HuamalgÜeÑos: Late Holocene Patterns (2,500 rcybp–Contact)
Chapter 6. Insularity and Interaction
Chapter 7. “And So We Went...”
References Cited
Index


Island of Fogs: Archaeological and

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    £999.99

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    A Hardback by Matthew R. Des Lauriers

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      View other formats and editions of Island of Fogs: Archaeological and by Matthew R. Des Lauriers

      Publisher: University of Utah Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 30/12/2010
      ISBN13: 9781607810070, 978-1607810070
      ISBN10: 1607810077

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Located off the west coast of the Mexican state of Baja California, Isla Cedros - Island of Fogs - is site to some of the most extensive and remarkable archaeological discoveries on the continent. Two sites dated to before 12,000 cal BP have been excavated, as well as portions of two large village sites dated to the last one thousand years. Among the artefacts discovered are the earliest fishhooks found on the continent. Drawing on ten years of his own historical, ethnographic, and archaeological research, Matthew Des Lauriers uses Isla Cedros to form hypotheses regarding the ecological, economic, and social nature of island societies. Des Lauriers uses a comparative framework in order to examine both the development and evolution of social structures among Pacific coast maritime hunter-gatherers as well as to track patterns of change. Because it examines the issue of whether human populations can intensively harvest natural resources without causing ecological collapse, Island of Fogs provides a relevant historical counterpart to modern discussions of ecological change and alternative models for sustainable development.

      Trade Review

      "I have followed Des Lauriers’ research with great interest over the last several years as he made remarkable find after find on the important, but very poorly understood, desert island.”—Torben Rick, Smithsonian Institution

      "The book will make a significant and timely contribution to this very little studied Mexican region."—MarÍa L. Cruz-Torres, Arizona State University

      "In what will hopefully be his first of many contributions to Baja California studies, Des Lauriers's Islands of Fogs greatly advances our understanding of the archaeology of Cedros Island, dispels inaccurate preconceptions about the Baja California peninsula, and in the process, contributes significant knowledge about the maritime prehistory of the New World. Arguably one of the most important studies from the region."—California Archaeology

      Table of Contents

      List of Figures
      List of Maps
      List of Tables
      Acknowledgments
      Introduction
      Chapter 1. A Place in Space and Time
      Chapter 2. Islanders, Fishermen, Pirates, and Corporations
      Chapter 3. The First IsleÑos
      Chapter 4. Becoming Cedros
      Chapter 5. The World of the HuamalgÜeÑos: Late Holocene Patterns (2,500 rcybp–Contact)
      Chapter 6. Insularity and Interaction
      Chapter 7. “And So We Went...”
      References Cited
      Index


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