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Gulf Coast Archaeology: The Southeastern United States and Mexico
 
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Gulf Coast Archaeology: The Southeastern United States and Mexico [Hardcover]

Nancy Marie White (Editor)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

May 15, 2005
Native peoples living around the Gulf of Mexico had much in common, from the time of the earliest hunter-fisher-gatherers onward. There have been hypotheses of prehistoric interaction between the southeastern United States and Mesoamerica, but explorations of the processes have been few. This volume chronicles the archaeological continuities and discontinuities along the Gulf Coast from Archaic through Postclassic/Mississippian times and later, including shell mounds/middens and estuarine adaptations, subsistence similarities, the relationship of early settlement and sea level rise, cultural complexity, early monumental construction, long-distance exchange relations, and symbolism and iconography.
            Many debatable issues are explored. Northeastern Mexico is a region relatively remote from the Mesoamerican heartland, as is coastal Texas from the southeastern United States. The connecting area of the south Texas/Mexican coast may have been too inhospitable for much habitation, thus inhibiting interaction, yet some artifact types and styles, not to mention food crops, crossed these boundaries. The long-distance diffusion of ideas of sociocultural complexity, food production, and monument construction are reexamined in Gulf Coast Archaeology with new data and wide geographic prespectives. This book is an important contribution to the hypothesis of prehistoric culture contact and interaction between native groups in North America and Mesoamerica, which has been an openly debated topic over the last century.
 
 

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Book Description

“Puts the topic of Mesoamerican contact back on the table. . . . At last, it’s okay to look to Mexican cultures for instruction and interpretation of a Pan American belief system.”—Cheryl Claassen, Appalachian State University
 
Native peoples living around the Gulf of Mexico had much in common, from the time of the earliest hunter-fisher-gatherers onward. There have been hypotheses of prehistoric interaction between the southeastern United States and Mesoamerica, but explorations of the processes have been few. This volume chronicles the archaeological continuities and discontinuities along the Gulf Coast from Archaic through Postclassic/Mississippian times and later, including shell mounds/middens and estuarine adaptations, subsistence similarities, the relationship of early settlement and sea level rise, cultural complexity, early monumental construction, long-distance exchange relations, and symbolism and iconography.
            Many debatable issues are explored. Northeastern Mexico is a region relatively remote from the Mesoamerican heartland, as is coastal Texas from the southeastern United States. The connecting area of the south Texas/Mexican coast may have been too inhospitable for much habitation, thus inhibiting interaction, yet some artifact types and styles, not to mention food crops, crossed these boundaries. The long-distance diffusion of ideas of sociocultural complexity, food production, and monument construction are reexamined in Gulf Coast Archaeology with new data and wide geographic prespectives. This book is an important contribution to the hypothesis of prehistoric culture contact and interaction between native groups in North America and Mesoamerica, which has been an openly debated topic over the last century.
 
 

About the Author

Nancy Marie White is professor of anthropology at the University of South Florida and coeditor of Grit-Tempered: Early Women Archaeologists in the Southeastern United States (UPF).

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 432 pages
  • Publisher: University Press of Florida; 1st edition (May 15, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0813028086
  • ISBN-13: 978-0813028088
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.6 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.9 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,607,806 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Cultures of the Americas - What Shaped Them?, October 6, 2007
This review is from: Gulf Coast Archaeology: The Southeastern United States and Mexico (Hardcover)
This book, an edited volume of archaeological studies of the possible relationships between the cultures of the Southeast and the cultures of Mexico and Central America, provides a much-needed analysis of the ways in which the peoples of the Southeast - especially those surrounding the Gulf of Mexico - may have shared elements of culture prior to European contact.

It has long been argued that the Mississippian societies observed by the earliest Spanish explorers were strongly influenced by the cultures of Mesoamerica, particularly the Olmec, the Toltec, and the Aztecs. This book takes a serious, detailed look at the ways in which such influence may have taken place prior to European contact, via water through the Gulf of Mexico and through the dissemination of elements such as platform mound construction, cultural symbols, and food resources such as maize. The only criticism I have of the book is a bias amongst the authors towards a systemic, materialist view of cultural development; Binford's New Archaeology is largely a dead letter, and it is crucially important to understand the role of systems of belief and ideas in cultural development, rather than attributing all such development to environmental factors.

However, that's a minor quibble with what is otherwise a fantastic beginning study of the ways in which cultures of North and Central America influenced each other. Traversing the Gulf of Mexico is relatively easy, and platform mounds from Safety Harbor and Crystal River in Florida all the way to the earthworks of the Mexican coast attest to common influence and systems of belief. It's good to see modern archaeologists begin to take a serious look at the mechanisms through which such influence took place.
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