I’ve put a book on 1-day course reserve that will help students looking for archaeological site reports in Mesoamerica – especially those who are doing Chichen Itza and finding that all the main site reports are signed out.
It’s called “The Carnegie Maya: The Carnegie Institution of Washington Maya Research Program, 1913–1957“, and it reprints “all the archaeological, ethnographic, linguistic, and historical investigations in the Maya region of southern Mexico and northern Central America between 1914 and 1957”.
It also includes a CD-ROM.
Check the detailed Table of Contents at http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip065/2005037446.html to see if the student is lucky enough to have the structure they are researching included in this volume. Scroll down to section 38 for Chichen Itza.
Search This Blog
Categories
Archives
desk resources
- Books like sapphires : from The Library of Congress Judaica Collection / Ann Brener ; foreword by Martin J. Gross.
- Temples of knowledge : art & science / texts by Alberto Manguel, António Filipe Pimentel, Stefano Salis; photographs, Massimo Listri.
- Jewish languages and book culture / edited by Judith Olszowy-Schlanger & César Merchán-Hamann.
- The book-makers : a history of the book in eighteen lives / Adam Smyth.
- Ductus : an online course in paleography / course, Bernard J. Muir ; software and graphics, Nick Kennedy ; video and ms images, Graeme Smith.