The Evolution of Anasazi Ceramic Production and Distribution: Compositional Evidence from a Pueblo-III Site in South-Central Utah (with Hector Neff, senior author). Journal of Field Archaeology, 1997 .
Abstract We start from the premise that ceramic evolution created the paste-compositional and formal diversity of archaeological ceramic assemblages. After discussing alternative models of formal and compositional diversity in ceramic assemblages, we examine an assemblage from an Anasazi site in southern Utah from which 206 sherds were characterized by neutron activation analysis. The assemblage is remarkably diverse compositionally, which indicates that vessels from a number of sources were used at the site. Equally interesting, similar vessels (belonging to a single "ware" category) occur in a number of distinct compositions, which indicates that they were made in multiple locations. We argue that the selective regime under which such an assemblage would accumulate is distinct from the selective regime under which assemblages with a strong association of form and composition would accumulate.
The Journal of Field Archaeology is also one of the most well respected national and international journals in archaeology. It is a peer reviewed publication with a high rejection rate.
This paper breaks new ground in the study of ceramics using neutron activation
analysis. It also uses a new theoretical approach that we have developed
in the study of culture change and ceramic exchange in the American Southwest.