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Dr. Richard Wilshusen

Sunday, Febuary 26, 2012- Dr. Richard Wilshusen: The American Neolithic: A Portal to New Understandings about Agricultural Revolutions, Hard Baskets, and Population Booms

on Mon, 09/12/2011 - 14:02

Sunday, Febuary 26, 2012 2:00 PM, Tattered Cover Downtown

Dr. Richard Wilshusen
State Archaeologist and Deputy State Historic Preservation Officer at History Colorado
 

The American Neolithic: A Portal to New Understandings about Agricultural Revolutions, Hard Baskets, and Population Booms

The archaeological record of the Southwest has provided us with unparalleled insights into the biological and cultural effects of the adoption of farming. Yet we have rarely utilized our knowledge of the Southwest to inform Neolithic research in other parts of the globe, such as Europe, the Middle East, or Asia. Because the adoption of agriculture and the rise of social complexity in the Americas occur thousands of years later than elsewhere, there is a sense that the “Neolithic” in a region such as the Southwest has little to teach researchers working in earlier contexts.  I will argue that nothing could be farther from the truth and will discuss some of the surprises of the last decade of research. Come find out how soft baskets became hard, how prehistoric populations increased at higher rates than we ever thought possible, and why people chose a life way that offered less meat and more work.

Brief biography

Richard Wilshusenis the State Archaeologist and Deputy State Historic Preservation Officer at History Colorado. Dr. Wilshusen has worked as an archaeologist in the American Southwest for over 30 years and is known for his work on population change and settlement shifts in the early Pueblo period, as well as research on the dramatic changes in early Navajo communities between A.D. 1540 and 1750. He is the coeditor (with Mark Varien) of Seeking the Center Place: Archaeology and Ancient Communities in the Mesa Verde Region (2002) and coauthor of “Chaco’s Beginnings” (with Ruth Van Dyke) in The Archaeology of Chaco Canyon: An Eleventh-Century Pueblo Regional Center (2006) and “Evaluating the Emergence of Early Villages in the North American Southwest in Light of the Proposed Neolithic Demographic Transition” (with Elizabeth Perry) in The Neolithic Demographic Transition and Its Consequences (2008). He is the senior editor of The Crucible of Pueblos: the Early Pueblo Period in the Northern Southwest, which will be published by UCLA later this Spring.