Publications

B. Sunday Eiselt, John Dudgeon, J. Andrew Darling, Evelyn Noris Paucar, Michael G. Glascock, and M. Kyle Woodson (2019). In-Situ Sourcing of Hematite Paints on Hohokam Red on Buff Ceramics using Laser Ablation Inductively Coupled-Mass Spectroscopy (LA ICP-MS).  Archaeometry. (DOI) – 10.1111/arcm.12427

B. Sunday Eiselt (2019) New Perspectives on the Regional Agricultural Economy in the Ohkay Owingeh Homeland.  In Reframing the Northern Rio Grande Pueblo Economy, edited by Scott G. Ortman. Anthropological Papers of the University of Arizona, University of Arizona Press, Tucson.

Fowles, Severin and B. Sunday Eiselt (2019) Latitudinal Movements in Tiwa-Apache History. In The Continuous Path:  Pueblo Movement and the Archaeology of Becoming, edited by Samuel Duwe and Robert W. Preucel, pp. 198-224. Winner of the 2017 Amerind Foundation Seminar Series Competition. University of Arizona Press, Amerind Studies in Anthropology.

B. Sunday Eiselt (2018). Vecino Archaeology and the Politics of PlayThe Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of Childhood, edited by Sally Crawford, Dawn Hadley, and Gillian Shepherd.  Oxford University Press.

Image result for engaged anthropology eiseltB. Sunday Eiselt, J. Andrew Darling, Samuel Duwe, Mark Willis, Chester Walker, William Hudspeth, Leslie Reeder-Meyers (2017). A Bird’s-eye View of Proto-Tewa Subsistence Agriculture:  Making the Case for Floodplain Farming in the Ohkay Owingeh Homeland, New Mexico.  American Antiquity Vol. 82(2): 397-413.

B. Sunday Eiselt and David Snow (2017).  From Right in Front of the Sun:  Athapaskan Perspectives on Plains-Pueblo Exchange.  In The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of the North American Southwest, edited by Barbara Mills and Severin Fowles.  Oxford University Press.

J. Andrew Darling and B. Sunday Eiselt (2017). Aquí Me Quedo: Vecino Origins and the Historic Settlement Archaeology of the Río del Oso, New Mexico.  In Transformations during the Colonial Era: Divergent  Histories  in the American Southwest, edited by John Douglass and William Graves.  University of Colorado Press. (available for free on-line).

B. Sunday Eiselt and J. Andrew Darling (2016).  Ethnogenesis and Demography in Southwest Vecino Society.  In Exploring Cause and Explanation Historical Ecology, Demography, and Movement in the American Southwest, edited by Ann Ramenofsky and Cynthia Herhahn.  University of Colorado Press, Boulder.

Samuel Duwe, B. Sunday Eiselt, J. Andrew Darling, Mark Willis, Chester Walker (2016). The Pueblo Decomposition Model: A Method for Quantifying Architectural Rubble to Estimate Population SizeJournal of Archaeological Science Vol. 65:20-31.

Sarah Trabert, B. Sunday Eiselt, David Hill, Jeffrey Ferguson, Margaret Beck (2016). Following a Glittering Trail:  Geo-Chemical and Petrographic Characterization of Micaceous Sherds Recovered from Dismal River SitesAmerican Antiquity, 81(2):364-374

J. Andrew Darling, Barnaby Lewis, Robert Valencia, B. Sunday Eiselt (2015). Archaeology in the Service of the Tribe Three Episodes in 21st Century Tribal Archaeology in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands. Kiva: Journal of Southwestern Anthropology and History, Vol. 81(1,2):62-79.

B. Sunday Eiselt (2013). Upland-Lowland Corridors and Historic Jicarilla Apache Settlement in the Northern Rio Grande. In From Mountain Top to Valley Bottom: Understanding Past Land Use in the Northern Rio Grande Valley, New Mexico, edited by Bradley Vierra. University of Utah Press.

B. Sunday Eiselt (2012). Becoming White Clay:  A History and Archaeology of Jicarilla Apache Enclavement. University of Utah Press.  Salt Lake City, UT.

B. Sunday Eiselt and J. Andrew Darling (2012). Vecino Economics: Gendered Economy and Micaceous Pottery Consumption in Nineteenth-Century Northern New Mexico American Antiquity Vol. 77(3).

Margaret E. Beck, Jill Onken, B. Sunday Eiselt, J. Andrew Darling, and Jeffrey R. Ferguson (2012). Geomorphological Setting and Native American Acquisition of Buff-firing Ceramic Clays in the Lower and Middle Gila River Valley, Arizona.  Journal of Archaeological Science Vol. 39:2:321-331.

B. Sunday Eiselt, Rachel Popelka‐Filcoff, J. Andrew Darling, Michael Glascock (2011). Hematite Sources and Archaeological Ochres from Hohokam and O’odham Sites in Central Arizona: An Experiment in Type Identification and Characterization. Journal of Archaeological Science Vol. 38:3019-3028.

B. Sunday Eiselt (2009). Americanist Archaeologies: 2008 in Review.  American Anthropologist Vol. 111(2).

B. Sunday Eiselt (2009). The Jicarilla Apaches and the Archaeology of the Taos Region.  In Between the Mountains – Beyond the Mountains: Papers in Honor of Paul R. Williams, edited by Emily Brown, Karen Armstrong, David M. Brugge, Carol Condie. Papers of the Archaeological Society of New Mexico Vol. 35, Albuquerque.

J.  Andrew Darling and B. Sunday Eiselt (2009) Trails Research in the Gila Bend Area.  In Trails, Rock Features and Homesteading in the Gila Bend Area, edited by John L. Czarzasty, Katherine  Peterson, Glen E. Rice, J. Andrew Darling.  Anthropological Research Papers No. 4.  University of Arizona Press, Tucson Gila River Indian Community, Sacaton, Arizona

B. Sunday Eiselt and Richard I. Ford (2007). Sangre de Cristo Micaceous Clays: Geochemical Indices for Source and Raw Material Distribution, Pastand Present. Kiva, The Journal of Southwest Archaeology and History Vol. 73(2).

B. Sunday Eiselt and Richard I. Ford (2006) Analysis of Micaceous Clay Sources in the Northern Rio Grande.  Transactions of the American Nuclear Society, Vol. 101.

Michelle Hegmon and B. Sunday Eiselt (2005). Engaged Anthropology:  Research Essays on North American Archaeology, Ethnobotany, and Museology.  Anthropology Papers 94, University of Michigan Museum of Anthropology.  Ann Arbor.

Gary Haynes and B. Sunday Eiselt (1999) The Power of Pleistocene Hunter-Gatherers: Forward and Backward Searching for Evidence About Mammoth Extinction. In, Humans and Other Catastrophes.  In, Patterns and Causes of Late Quaternary Extinctions, edited by Ross MacPhee. Advances in Vertebrate Paleobiology. Plenum Press, New York.

B. Sunday Eiselt (1997) Fish Remains from the Spirit Cave Paleofecal Material: 9,400 Year Old Evidence for Great Basin Utilization of Small Fishes. Nevada Historical Quarterly 40(1):117-139.

 

 

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