Description
Book SynopsisLong before the coming of Euro-Americans, native inhabitants of what is now Kansas left their mark on the land: carvings in the soft orange and red sandstone of the state's Smoky Hills. In a series of photographs,
Petroglyphs of the Kansas Smoky Hills offers viewers a chance to read the story that these carvings tell of the region's first people.
Trade ReviewThe only way to preserve rock art-a finite and fragile cultural resource-is to record it. This book is an important contribution toward that goal. The high-resolution photographs stand alone as valuable updates and additions to the existing archaeological records. Buchanan’s narrative style makes science approachable to a broad Audience. His commentaries are strong on observing things in context, within both the natural landscape and human lifeways. The presentation is respectful to Native Americans, not presuming to speak for them or co-opt their heritage, and the positive role of private landowners is acknowledged. The strong stewardship message is exemplary." - Virginia Wulfkuhle, public archeologist emerita at the Kansas Historical Society and editor of
The Kansas Anthropologist"Buchanan, Griggs, and Svaty provide a valuable contribution to the field, documenting through detailed photography and descriptions previously unrecorded Native American petroglyph sites and updating conditions observed at several other previously recorded sites in central Kansas. By elaborating on the geological context of these locations, they contribute a unique perspective for further research, all the while addressing the cultural and historical aspects of approaches archaeologists have employed in analyzing these prehistoric images. The authors achieve a balance by creating a work that is important to professionals and accessible to the public." - Brian L. O'Neill, PhD, senior research associate/archaeologist, University of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History
"
Petroglyphs of the Kansas Smoky Hills offers a thoughtful and useful assessment of prehistoric rock carvings. This book provides essential information about these enigmatic human creations without introducing undue speculation on their origins or meanings. The photographs are excellent, allowing readers to draw their own conclusions about the meanings and purposes of petroglyphs." - Robert Hoard, state archeologist of Kansas and coeditor of
Kansas Archaeology