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9781607816225 Academic Inspection Copy

Pottery Ethnoarchaeology in the Michoacan Sierra

  • ISBN-13: 9781607816225
  • Publisher: UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS
    Imprint: UNIVERSITY OF UTAH PRESS
  • By Michael J. Shott
  • Price: AUD $116.00
  • Stock: 0 in stock
  • Availability: This book is temporarily out of stock, order will be despatched as soon as fresh stock is received.
  • Local release date: 29/10/2018
  • Format: Paperback (254.00mm X 178.00mm) 336 pages Weight: 453g
  • Categories: Archaeology [HD]Anthropology [JHM]
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Although most ceramic studies describe vessel production and use, the causes and rates of pottery discard are often neglected in archaeological studies. Michael Shott presents analytical methods for determining pottery use life and demonstrates why use life should not be overlooked. Over a five-year period Shott inventoried the household pottery of about twenty-five homes in five towns in Michoacan, Mexico, recording age and types of use. He also looked at a subsample on a monthly basis over two years to estimate the magnitude of early vessel failure that would go unnoticed in an annual census. His analysis of about 900 vessels clearly shows that context does not explain use life, but vessel size does. Bigger pots last longer. Consulting other ethnoarchaeological sources for comparison and cross-cultural perspectives, Shott shows that his results can be applied to other archaeological datasets for determining numbers of original whole vessels as well as site occupation span.
Michael J. Shott is a professor of the Department of Anthropology at the University of Akron. His research focuses on methods of stone-tool analysis and how the archaeological record formed. He has published three monographs and several edited volumes, including Works in Stone: Contemporary Perspectives on Lithic Analysis (University of Utah Press, 2015).
"I found this to be an exceptionally clearly formulated and presented study and was highly impressed with the author's rigor in carrying it out. As he points out, this is hard and inglorious work that needs to be done if we are to understand the archaeological record." -J. Theodore PeNa, professor of Roman archaeology, University of California, Berkeley, and director, Pompeii Artifact Life History Project, Pompeii, Italy "Michael J. Shott is an eminent authority on cultural formation processes. This data-rich ethnoarchaeological study of MichoacAn domestic ceramics sheds new light on quantitative transformations from systemic context to archaeological context. Shott's empirically grounded and well-qualified generalizations provide archaeologists who study ceramic assemblages worldwide with essential analytical tools. This spectacular book, Shott's labor of love, is truly a magnum opus." -Michael Brian Schiffer, author of Archaeology's Footprints in the Modern World
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