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Mesoamerica Quarterly: References

  1. Associated Press (Dallas). “Chilean Site Verified as Earliest Habitation of Americas; Findings Show Monte Verde Dates Back 12,500 Years.” National Geographic. February 10, 1997.
  2. Marisa Atanasoff-Frisk. “Rediscovering the Aztec Indians.” http://www.yale.edu/ynhti/curriculum/units/1992/2/92.02.05.x.html. 10/17/2000.
  3. Author not available. “The First Americans.” The Economist, vol. 346, February 21, 1998.
  4. Virginia M. Betz. “Cotton, Maize, and Chocolate: Plant Domestication in Mesoamerica.” Athena Review (1998), vol. 2, no. 1.
  5. William Booth. “Early Migrants May Have Come by Land and Sea.” The Washington Post. September 6, 1999. A13.
  6. James E. Brady. “Buried Secrets, Luminous Find.“ Americas (English Edition) (1995), vol. 47, no. 4.
  7. Stuart J. Feidel. “Artifact Provenience at Monte Verde: Confusions and Contradictions,” in Special Report: Monte Verde Revisited. Discovering Archaeology, November/December 1999.
  8. Thomas H. Frederikson. “Aztec Medicine.” http://www.northeast.com/~spdtom/a-med.html. 10/17/2000.
  9. Tim Friend. “Genetic Detectives Trace the Origin of the First Americans.” USA Today. Tuesday, September 21, 1995. D5.
  10. Paul Grepts. “Amaranthus.” http://agronomy.ucdavis.edu/gepts/pb143/crop/amaranth/amaranth.htm. 10/18/2000.
  11. Paul Grepts. “Avocado.” http://agronomy.ucdavis.edu/gepts/pb143/crop/avocado/avocado.htm. 10/18/2000.
  12. Scott B. Goodyear. “The Aztecs: Introduction.” http://www.geocities.com/Athens/5003/aztec2.html. 10/17/2000.
  13. Don Alan Hall. “Stone Tool Tradition Endures Radical Environmental Change.” Mammoth Trumpet (1995), vol. 10, no. 3.
  14. Don Alan Hall. “The Americas After Monte Verde.” Mammoth Trumpet (1998), vol. 13, no. 3.
  15. Don Alan Hall. “Coastal-Entry Model Gains Support as Ice-Free Corridor Theory Fades.” Mammoth Trumpet (1998), vol. 13, no. 3.
  16. Richard G. Klein. The Human Career: Human Biological and Cultural Origins, Second Edition. University of Chicago Press, Chicago, Copyright © 1999.
  17. Boyce Rensberger. “Find of Hunters’ Tools Suggests Multiple Migrations from Asia.” The Washington Post. March 25, 1993. A3.
  18. F. A. Street-Perrot et al. “Anthropogenic Soil Erosion Around Lake Patzcuaro, Michoacan, Mexico, During the Preclassic and Late Postclassic-Hispanic Periods.” American Antiquity (1989), vol. 54, no. 4.
  19. Curt Suplee. “Find May Rewrite Americas’ Prehistory: Artifacts in Chile Challenge Theory of When, How First Settlers Arrived.” The Washington Post. February 11, 1997. A1.
  20. Karl L. Taube. “The Maize Tamale in Classic Maya Diet, Epigraphy, and Art.” American Antiquity (1989), vol. 54, no. 1.
  21. John Noble Wilford. “Human Presence in Americas is Pushed Back a Millenium.” The New York Times. Tuesday, February 11, 1997. A1 & C4.
  22. John Noble Wilford. “Chilean Field Yields New Clues to Peopling of Americas.” The New York Times. August 25, 1998.
  23. George Wisner. “Pre-Glacial Site in Alberta Suggests Early Human Presence.” Mammoth Trumpet (1995), vol. 10, no. 2.
  24. Grant D. Zazula. “The Role of Linguistics Within a Multidisciplinary Framework for Studying the Initial Peopling of the Americas.” http://www.ualberta.ca/~nativest/pim/zazula.html. 10/14/2000.

 

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