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This volume examines the intersection between archaeologists working in the Maya area of Central American and local communities and agencies. It highlights issues of past colonial practice as well as issues involving modern tourism. The archaeologists involved in this volume attempt to suggest ways of bettering both community relationships and standards of practice for the field of Maya archaeology.
Biography & True Stories --- Archaeology --- archaeology --- community museums --- gender and sexuality --- Maya --- Maya k’an glyph --- Tynanthus guatemalensis eugenol --- antidiabetic activity --- cultural heritage --- Maya archaeology --- indigenous critique of anthropology --- settler colonialism --- conservation --- experimental archaeology --- identity --- education --- Puuc --- collaboration --- descendant communities --- Afro-Caribbean history --- Creole --- Belize --- heritage management --- collaborative research --- consolidation --- stabilization --- looting --- culinary heritage --- celebrity chefs --- foodways --- tourism --- Yaxunah --- archaeological heritage --- education outreach --- community participation --- culture and nature Conservation --- community based heritage and preservation --- anthropological archaeology --- Caste War of Yucatan --- community archaeology --- community development --- archaeological ethics --- world heritage --- continuity --- public outreach --- Guatemala --- microfinance --- historical archaeology --- Yucatan --- tangible heritage --- engaged archaeology --- inequality --- contradictions --- Belizean archaeology --- n/a --- Maya k'an glyph
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This volume examines the intersection between archaeologists working in the Maya area of Central American and local communities and agencies. It highlights issues of past colonial practice as well as issues involving modern tourism. The archaeologists involved in this volume attempt to suggest ways of bettering both community relationships and standards of practice for the field of Maya archaeology.
archaeology --- community museums --- gender and sexuality --- Maya --- Maya k’an glyph --- Tynanthus guatemalensis eugenol --- antidiabetic activity --- cultural heritage --- Maya archaeology --- indigenous critique of anthropology --- settler colonialism --- conservation --- experimental archaeology --- identity --- education --- Puuc --- collaboration --- descendant communities --- Afro-Caribbean history --- Creole --- Belize --- heritage management --- collaborative research --- consolidation --- stabilization --- looting --- culinary heritage --- celebrity chefs --- foodways --- tourism --- Yaxunah --- archaeological heritage --- education outreach --- community participation --- culture and nature Conservation --- community based heritage and preservation --- anthropological archaeology --- Caste War of Yucatan --- community archaeology --- community development --- archaeological ethics --- world heritage --- continuity --- public outreach --- Guatemala --- microfinance --- historical archaeology --- Yucatan --- tangible heritage --- engaged archaeology --- inequality --- contradictions --- Belizean archaeology --- n/a --- Maya k'an glyph
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This volume examines the intersection between archaeologists working in the Maya area of Central American and local communities and agencies. It highlights issues of past colonial practice as well as issues involving modern tourism. The archaeologists involved in this volume attempt to suggest ways of bettering both community relationships and standards of practice for the field of Maya archaeology.
Biography & True Stories --- Archaeology --- archaeology --- community museums --- gender and sexuality --- Maya --- Maya k'an glyph --- Tynanthus guatemalensis eugenol --- antidiabetic activity --- cultural heritage --- Maya archaeology --- indigenous critique of anthropology --- settler colonialism --- conservation --- experimental archaeology --- identity --- education --- Puuc --- collaboration --- descendant communities --- Afro-Caribbean history --- Creole --- Belize --- heritage management --- collaborative research --- consolidation --- stabilization --- looting --- culinary heritage --- celebrity chefs --- foodways --- tourism --- Yaxunah --- archaeological heritage --- education outreach --- community participation --- culture and nature Conservation --- community based heritage and preservation --- anthropological archaeology --- Caste War of Yucatan --- community archaeology --- community development --- archaeological ethics --- world heritage --- continuity --- public outreach --- Guatemala --- microfinance --- historical archaeology --- Yucatan --- tangible heritage --- engaged archaeology --- inequality --- contradictions --- Belizean archaeology
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Mayas --- Indians of Mexico --- Indians of Central America --- Indiens d'Amérique --- Antiquities --- Antiquités --- Mexico --- Central America --- Mexique --- Amérique centrale --- Antiquities. --- Indiens d'Amérique --- Antiquités --- Amérique centrale
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Indians of Central America --- Mayas --- Indiens d'Amérique --- Antiquities --- Antiquités --- Belize --- Caracol Site (Belize) --- Caracol (Belize : Site archéologique)
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Indians of Central America --- Mayas --- Indiens d'Amérique --- Antiquities --- Antiquités --- Santa Rita Corozal, Site de (Bélize) --- Belize --- Santa Rita Corozal Site (Belize)
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Indians of Mexico --- Indians of Central America --- Elite (Social sciences) --- Kings and rulers. --- Central America. --- Mexico --- Central America --- Antiquities.
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This book includes evaluation of the economics of salt production and trade from analyses of the spatial patterning of wooden buildings and associated artifacts that were mapped on the sea floor at the Paynes Creek Salt Works. The book describes the discovery and mapping of the wooden architecture as well as the associated pottery and other artifacts on the surface and embedded in the sea floor during a systematic search for salt production in a large, salt-water lagoon system, Punta Ycacos Lagoon, in southern Belize.
Salt industry and trade --- Mayas --- Salt --- Brine --- Halite --- Sodium chloride --- Table salt --- Chlorides --- Halide minerals --- Sodium salts --- Maya Indians --- Mayans --- Indians of Central America --- Indians of Mexico --- Nonmetallic minerals industry --- Antiquities. --- Commerce. --- History.
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An exploration, using research from the Maya site Motul de San Jose in Guatemala, of how political structures and dynamics have been examined by political anthropologists and archaeologists over the last century.
Mayas --- Political anthropology --- Politics and government. --- History. --- Antiquities. --- Guatemala
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Migrations in Late Mesoamerica gathers scholars from different disciplines to address the role of migration during the most tumultuous centuries of Mesoamerican prehistory (A.D. 500-1500). Ethnohistoric, linguistic, biological, and archaeological data coupled with visual imagery and hieroglyphic texts associate the final millennium of Mesoamerican prehistory with the political, economic, and social changes that often unmoored populations from ancestral lands. Independent investigations into these topics have repeatedly discerned the movement of social groups at their core, but migration itself has rarely been the central focus of theoretical analysis. The ongoing rehabilitation of migration as a subject for study now allows prehistorians to re-examine its relationship to other areas of social life.
Indians of Mexico --- Indians of Central America --- Migrations. --- Mexico --- Central America --- History.
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