essay
The Marana Mound site: patterns of social differentiation in the Early Classic period
hohokam village revisited • Glenwood Springs, Colo. • Published In 2000 • Pages: 245-275
By: Fish, Paul R., Fish, Suzanne K..
Abstract
Increasing Hohokam political and social complexity during the early Classic period is examined from the perspective of recent investigations at the Marana Mound site in the northern Tucson Basin. This site offers unique distributional information within a Hohokam center and within the context of the larger multi-site community of which it was part. Differential access to exotic goods, patterns of craft and subsistence production, ritual, and modes of residential architecture are considered at both mound site and community levels (p. 245)
- HRAF PubDate
- 2010
- Region
- North America
- Sub Region
- Southwest and Basin
- Document Type
- essay
- Evaluation
- Creator Type
- Archaeologist
- Document Rating
- 5: Excellent Primary Data
- Analyst
- John Beierle; 2009
- Field Date
- no date
- Coverage Date
- 800-700 BP (AD 1200-1300)
- Coverage Place
- Marana Mound Site, Northern Tucson basin, Arizona, United States
- Notes
- Paul R. Fish and Suzanne K. Fish
- Includes bibliographical references (p. 271-275)
- LCSH
- Hohokam culture