La consultation et le
téléchargement des textes intégraux
sont limités aux membres de l’ACA. Abonnez-vous
dès aujourd’hui à l’ACA et vous
bénéficierez de ces avantages et plusieurs
autres. L'ACA vous offre pendant un temps limité:
Smith-Wintemberg
Award Presented to Roy Carlson
– David Pokotylo
Gilman
Falls Site: Implications for the Early
and Middle Archaic of the Maritime
Peninsula – David
Sanger
Archaeology's
Public: A Perspective From Two Canadian
Museums
– Debbi and Aubrey Cannon
The
Boardwalk and Grassy Bay Sites: Patterns
of Seasonality and Subsistence on the
Northern Northwest Coast, B.C.
– Frances Stewart and Kathlyn Stewart
Some
Artifacts-Diagnostic Criteria of Quartzite
Cobble-Tool Industries from Alberta – Jiri
Chlachula and Raymond LeBlanc
The
Irish Creek Site: Evidence for a Mid-Holocene
Microblade Component on the Northern
Northwest Coast– Madona
Moss,
Jon Erlandson, R. Scott Byram and Richard Hughes
A
Volcanic Glass Library for the Pacific
Northwest: Problems and Prospects – Malcolm
James, Jeff Bailey and John D'Auria
Interior
Occupation: A Maritime Archaic Site
at South Brook Park, Western Newfoundland – David
Reader
Ancient
South America (K.O.
Bruhns)
– reviewed
by Augusto Oyuela-Caycedo
Plains
Indians, A.D. 500-1500: The Archaeological
Past of Historic Groups (K.H. Schlesier, ed.) and Postprocessual Critique
(P.Duke
and M.C. Wilson, eds.)
– reviewed by Laurie Milne
Reading
Rock Art: Interpreting the Indian
Rock Paintings of the Canadian Shield (G. Rajnovich) – reviewed
by Michael A. Klassen
Huron
Paleoethnobotany(S.G.
Monkton)
– reviewed
by Cynthia Zutter
Equity
Issues for Women in Archaeology (M.C.
Nelson)
– reviewed by Holly Martelle-Hayster
The
Archaeology of Rank (P.K.
Wason) and Mortuary
Variability and Status Differentiation
on the Columbia-Fraser Plateau
(R.J. Schulting)
– reviewed by Gary Coupland
Volume
20 marks the beginning
of an era of challenge and
change for the Canadian Journal of
Archaeology.
As you will no doubt notice,
the
journal has taken on a new look –
one that I hope you will find easier
to read. In the interest of saving
money, the journal has also adopted
a non-glossy cover stock. The
replacement stock should prove just
as sturdy and will save the CAA a
considerable amount in the cost of
producing the CJA.