Ethnoarchaeology is the ethnographic study of peoples for archaeology archaeological reasons, usually through the study of the material remains of a society see David & Kramer 2001 . Ethnoarchaeology aids archaeologists in reconstructing ancient lifeways by studying the material and non material traditions of modern societies. Archaeologists can then infer that ancient societies used the same techniques as their modern counterparts given a similar set of environmental circumstances. Ethnography can provide insights of value to archaeologists into how people in the past may have lived, especially with regard to their social structures, religious beliefs and other aspects of their culture. However, it is still unclear how to relate most of the insights generated by this anthropological research to archaeological investigations. This is due to the lack of emphasis by anthropologists on the material remains created and discarded by societies and on how these material remains vary with differences in how a society is organised. This general problem has led archaeologists for example, London nowiki 2000 nowiki to argue that anthropology anthropological work is not adequate for answering archaeological problems, and that archaeologists should therefore undertake ethnoarchaeological work to answer these problems. These studies have focused far more on the manufacture, use and discard of tools ... example of ethnoarchaeology is that of Brian Hayden 1987 , whose team examined the manufacture of Mesoamerican ... & Skibo 2000, Kohn 2010 . Bibliography David, N. & C. Kramer 2001 Ethnoarchaeology in Action , Cambridge University Press. Deal, M. 1998 Pottery Ethnoarchaeology in the Central Maya Highlands , University ... , PhD dissertation, University of Chicago. Kramer, C. 1997 Pottery in Rajasthan Ethnoarchaeology in Two Indian Cities , Smithsonian. London, G. 2000 Ethnoarchaeology and interpretation, in Near Eastern Archaeology 63 2 8. Longacre, W. & J. Skibo eds. 1994 Kalinga Ethnoarchaeology , Smithsonian. Ethnobiology ... more details
Year nav topic4 1978 archaeology science The year 1978 in archaeology involved some significant events. Explorations Excavations New excavations at Brahmagiri archaeological site Brahmagiri by Amalananda Ghosh. Finds February 21 The remains of the Great Pyramid of Tenochtitlan . Bactrian Gold hoard. Publications Lewis R. Binford Nunamiut Ethnoarchaeology . Mounir Bouchenaki Cit s antiques d Alg rie . Richard A. Gould ed. Explorations in Ethnoarchaeology . Keith Muckelroy Maritime Archaeology . Events Theban Mapping Project is established. March 31 6,000 people march through Dublin to Wood Quay to protest against the building of civic offices on the Viking site. Births Deaths August 16 Sir Max Mallowan . Category 1978 in science Archaeology Category 1978 Archaeology Category Years in archaeology no Arkeologi ret 1978 ... more details
Ethnozoology is the study of the past and present interrelationships between human culture s and the animal s in their environment. ref http www.mnsu.edu emuseum cultural ethnoarchaeology ethnozoology index.shtml Ethnozoology Index Bot generated title ref It includes classification and naming of zoological forms, cultural knowedge and use of wild and domestic animals. ref Johnson, Leslie Main. Ethnobiology Traditional Biological Knowledge in Contemporary Global Context. Anthropology 491 study guide, Athabasca University 2002. p. 71 ref It is one of the main subdisciplines of ethnobiology and shares many methodologies and theoretical frameworks with ethnobotany . References reflist 1 div class references small div External links http www.scribd.com people documents 8414590 folder 86722 Notes on Bukusu ethnozoology from western Kenya Ethnobiology Anthropology stub ecology stub Category Ethnobiology ... more details
Cleanup rewrite date May 2009 The middle range theory in archaeology links archaeological data describing how people use objects with the human behavior s or natural processes associated with this use. Middle range research attempts to provide archaeology with the tools needed to infer behaviors from the archaeological finds. Lewis Binford , the main advocate of the middle range theory, conducted ethnographic fieldwork among the Nunamiut Nunamiut Eskimo , the Navajo people Navajo , and the Australian aborigines . He tested the theory applying archaeological concepts and methodology to the analysis of contemporary waste garbage . Binford developed the middle range theory concept as applied in archeology from the middle range theory sociology sociological middle range theory of Robert K. Merton . See also experimental archaeology ethnoarchaeology taphonomy References D.H. Thomas, 2006. Archaeology, 4th Edition . Thomson Wadsworth. C. Pierce, 1989. http www.archive.org details ACritiqueOfMiddle rangeTheoryInArchaeology A Critique of Middle Range Theory in Archaeology. Category Archaeological theory archaeology stub ... more details
The Winckler Caetani theory , named after its two most distinguished proponents, Hugo Winckler and Leone Caetani , which claims that Arabia was originally a land of great fertility and the first home of the semitic peoples. Through the millennia it has been undergoing a process of steady desiccation, a drying up of wealth and waterways and spread of the desert at the expenses of the cultivable land. The declining productivity of the peninsula, together with the increase in the number of the inhabitants, led to a series of crises of overpopulation and consequently to a recurring cycle of invasions of the neighbouring countries by the semitic peoples of the peninsula. It was these crises that carried the Assyrians, the Aramaeans, Canaanites including the Phoenicians and Hebrews , and finally the Arabs themselves into the Fertile Crescent . The Arabs of history would thus be the undifferentiated residue after the great invasion of ancient history had taken place. This theoruy has recently been replaced and significantly updated by Juris Zarins who proposes that a Circum Arabian Nomadic Pastoral Complex developed in the period from the climatic crisis of 6,200BCE, partly as a result of an increasing emphasis in PPNB cultures upon animal domesticates, and a fusion with Harifian hunter gatherers in Southern Palestine, with affiliate connections with the cultures of Fayyum and the Eastern Desert of Egypt. Cultures practicing this lifestyle spread down the Red Sea shoreline and moved east from Syria into Southern Iraq. ref Zarins, Juris 1992 Pastoral Nomadism in Arabia Ethnoarchaeology and the Archaeological Record, in O. Bar Yosef and A. Khazanov, eds. Pastoralism in the Levant ref References Reflist anthropology stub Category Ancient Near East ... more details
of New Mexico in 1969. ref name Renfrew 1987 pp. 687 689 Ethnoarchaeology Binford withdrew from ... culture is known as ethnoarchaeology and is credited to Binford. ref Harvnb Trigger 2006 p 399 405 ref ... to archaeological theory and his promotion of Ethnoarchaeology ethnoarchaeological research . As a leading ... 4 Nunamiut Ethnoarchaeology 1978 ISBN 0 12 100040 0 An archaeological perspective New York Seminar ... more details
Cleanup date November 2007 As with most academia academic disciplines, there are a number of archaeological sub disciplines typically characterised by a focus on a specific method or type of material, geographical or chronological focus, or other thematic concern. In addition, certain civilizations have attracted so much attention that their study has been specifically named. These sub disciplines include Assyriology Mesopotamia , Phoeniciology Phoenicia , Classical archaeology ancient Greece Greece and ancient Rome Rome , and Egyptology ancient Egypt Egypt . The other main division of archaeology is into historical archaeology , which examines civilizations that left behind written records and prehistoric archaeology , which concerns itself with societies that did not have writing systems . However, the term is generally valid only in Europe and Asia where literate societies emerged without colonial influence. In areas where literacy arrived relatively late, it is more convenient to use other terms to divide up the archaeological record. In areas of semi literacy the term protohistoric archaeology can be adopted to cover the study of societies with very limited written records. One example of a protohistoric site is Fort Ross on the northern California coast, which included settlements of literate Russia ns and non literate Native Americans in the United States American Indians and Alaska Natives Alaska natives . Ethnoarchaeology is the study of modern societies resembling extinct ones of archaeological interest, for archaeological purposes. It is often difficult to infer solid conclusions about the structure and values of ancient societies from their material remains, not only because objects are mute and say little about those who crafted and used them, but also because not all objects survive to be uncovered by scholars of a later age. Ethnoarchaeology seeks to determine, for instance, what kinds of objects used in a living settlement are deposited in midden s o ... more details
Chris Philo born 1960 is Professor of Geography at the Department of Geographical and Earth Sciences, the University of Glasgow . Philo graduated from the Sidney Sussex College of University of Cambridge Cambridge University and became a Research Fellow there. In 1989 he joined the Department of Geography at the University of Wales, Lampeter , holding that post for six years, until 1995. He then joined the University of Glasgow as a Professor, becoming head of the department in 2002. In 2006 Chris was replaced as Head of Department by Professor Trevor Hoey and was enlisted on the Geography and Environmental Studies RAE Sub Panel. Traditionally his interests have been in the historical geographies of madness and mental health and mental health care provision. Later, he dabbled in the emerging, and increasingly significant, sub discipline of animal geographies . A devotee of the work of Michel Foucault , his research extended and localised Foucault s history of madness to England and Wales. Over a decade in the writing his major work was published by a minor press in Wales as A Geographical History of Institutional Provision for the Insane from Medieval Times to the 1860s in England and Wales The Space Reserved for Insanity . Always a generous collaborator, he has co edited numerous general anthologies of human geography . Most recently, he has examined, with Eric Laurier , cafe culture in Glasgow . Partial bibliography Philo, C. 2004. A Geographical History of Institutional Provision for the Insane from Medieval Times to the 1860s in England and Wales The Space Reserved for Insanity. Edwin Mellen Press, Lewiston and Queenston, USA, and Lampeter, Wales, UK 712 pages Cloke, P., Cook, I., Crang, P., Goodwin, M., Painter, J., Philo, C. 2004. Practising Human Geography. Sage, London 416 pages Philo, C. 2004. Michel Foucault . In Hubbard, P., Kitchin, R. and Valentine, G. eds Key Thinkers on Space and Place. Sage, London, 121 128 Laurier, E, Philo, C. 2004. Ethnoarchaeolog ... more details
orphan date April 2010 Image CrowVillageSam.jpg thumb right Crow Village Sam circa 1970 Crow Village Sam Phillips 1893&ndash 1974 was a Yup ik Eskimo native who lived in the mid Kuskokwim River valley in Alaska . Crow Village Sam was born around 1893 in Crow Village, Alaska . Birth records in the area were not maintained until 1914, so that date is based on Crow Village Sam s recollection as told to archeologist Wendell H. Oswalt in 1963. ref Oswalt, Wendell H. & James W. Vanstone 1967 . The Ethnoarchaeology of Crow Village, Alaska Coyote Press. ref It has been reported by some of his descendants that Sam was half Russian. When he was approximately 10 years old, he was part of the evacuation of Crow Village to a settlement downriver that was referred to as New Crow Village although today it is called Crow Village and the original settlement is referred to as Old Crow Village. He had survived the kanukpuk or big sickness a Kuskokwim influenza epidemic of the early 20th century that wiped out about 50 of the population. He also lived in Akiak, Alaska Akiak , and Chuathbaluk, Alaska Chuathbaluk . Image Cvsam2.jpg thumb right Crow Village Sam shown wearing his favorite footwear By the 1940s, Crow Village Sam was recognized as the leader of the native people living in the mid Kuskokwim valley. He was an accomplished boat builder, wood worker, and snowshoe maker among other things. He was fluent in the English language , which is probably the biggest asset in his role as leader. In 1954, Crow Village Sam orchestrated the abandonment of Crow Village when he moved the inhabitants upstream to Chuathbaluk. Chuathbaluk was a village located 18 miles upstream from Crow Village that had been abandoned since 1929. Crow Village Sam still maintained a fish camp at the abandoned Crow Village with a large fish smoke house and would later install a wind powered generator at Crow Village to supply his radio with electricity. Crow Village Sam was an avid subsistence fisher and had the l ... more details
Contemporary Archaeology is a field of archaeological research that focuses on the most recent 20th and 21st century past, and also increasingly explores the application of archaeological thinking to the contemporary world. It has also been referred to as the archaeology of the contemporary past . ref Buchli, V. and G. Lucas eds 2001. Archaeologies of the Contemporary Past. London Routledge ref The use of this term is particularly associated with the Contemporary and Historical Archaeology in Theory CHAT conference group ref http www.contemp hist arch.ac.uk ref , based in the United Kingdom. The field forms part of historical archaeology , or the archaeology of the modern period. Unlike ethnoarchaeology , contemporary archaeology studies the recent and contemporary past in its own right, rather than to develop models that can inform the study of the more distant past. Often informed by anthropological material culture studies , but characterised by putting traditional archaeological methods and practices to new uses, research in this field generally aims to make an archaeological contribution to broader social scientific studies of the contemporary world, focusing especially upon contributing methods of studying material things objects, landscapes, buildings, material heritage, etc. to sociological, geographical and political studies of the modern world. The field has developed especially in heritage management, for example through English Heritage s Change and Creation programme on the landscapes of the later 20th century ref Schofield, J. The Archaeology of the 20th Century. http www.archaeologists.net modules icontent inPages docs conference schofield.doc ref Key Works in Contemporary Archaeology Bradley, A., V. Buchli, G. Faiclough, D. Hicks, J. Miller and J. Schofield 2004. Change and Creation Historic Landscape Character 1950 2000. London English Heritage. Buchli, V. 1999. An Archaeology of Socialism. Oxford Berg. Buchli, V. and G. Lucas eds 2001. Archaeologie ... more details
Infobox Journal cover Image AsianPerspectives.gif discipline archaeology abbreviation AP frequency semiannual website http www.uhpress.hawaii.edu journals ap publisher University of Hawaii Press country United States USA history 1957 present ISSN 0066 8435 eISSN 1535 8283 Asian Perspectives The Journal of Archaeology for Asia and the Pacific is an international academic journal devoted to the history and prehistory of Asia and the Pacific region. In addition to archaeology , it features articles and book reviews on ethnoarchaeology , palaeoanthropology , physical anthropology , and ethnography of interest and use to prehistorians. Asian Perspectives first appeared in 1957 as the Bulletin of the Far Eastern Prehistory Association American Branch under the editorship of Wilhelm G. Solheim II , then followed its editor to other institutions. Volumes II 1958 through VIII 1964 were published by Hong Kong University Press, and volumes IX 1966 through XI 1968 by the Social Science Research Institute at the University of Hawaii . The University of Hawaii Press became the publisher from volume XII 1969 , adding the subtitle A Journal of Archaeology and Prehistory of Asia and the Pacific. ref cite web id hdl 10125 16993 title Editorial author Wilhelm G. Solheim II work Asian Perspectives XXX iii iv year 1991 publisher University of Hawaii Press ref In 1992, the editorship passed to Michael W. Graves and the subtitle was changed to The Journal of Archaeology for Asia and the Pacific . Miriam Stark at the University of Hawai okina i served as editor from 2000 through 2006, ref cite web url http www.anthropology.hawaii.edu People Faculty Stark title Department of Anthropology, University of Hawai okina i at M noa Miriam T. Stark, PhD ref then the editorship passed to three person team in Chicago Deborah Bekken of the Field Museum , Laura Lee Junker of the University of Illinois at Chicago , ref cite web url http www.uic.edu depts anth faculty junker.html title Laura L. Junker ac ... more details
Gerson Levi Lazzaris born in Curitiba , on November 25, 1979 is a Brazil ian archaeologist, descendent of Italy Italo Slovenes Slovenian immigrants. Most of the Lazzaris are from Forno di Zoldo , Veneto , from where most of them emigrated during the end of the 19th century, and also after the Second World War to Argentina , Australia , Brazil and United States . Biography Born as Gerson Levi da Silva Mendes, he had his current surname recently recovered. In 1983, his family moved from Curitiba to S o Paulo . At the age of 15 he moved to Lisbon, Portugal , following a short experience in Finland . Accepted in the University of S o Paulo , Levi Lazzaris started his studies in Archaeology and History, focusing Anti semitism in the Austro Hungarian Empire 2003 , obtaining his BA. In 2007 he obtained a Master degree in Archaeology in the same University of S o Paulo based on an extensive dissertation about Middle Holocene hunter gatherer societies in Southeast Region, Brazil Southeast Brazil . He was the first archaeologist to introduce ecosystem approach in Brazilian archaeology. On March 2007 he was accepted as graduate student at Vanderbilt University . Levi Lazzaris has published more than 50 articles between, ranging from political reviews in Trotskyite periodicals to scientific reviews and governamental reports. He has also translated a book and is the author of two others, both in preparation for publication. Levi Lazzaris is currently an assistant researcher in the State Museum of Roraima, Brazil, working in Roraima among the Ninam Indians , a Yanomamo subgroup, ref http ethnoarchaelogy.blogspot.com NINAM ETHNOARCHAEOLOGY AND INDIGENOUS RIGHTS Yanomami e Ye kuana manifestam seu pesar pelo falecimento do antropologo Luis Fernando Pereira ref developing ethnoarchaeological studies in the Uraricoera valley. ref http www.vanderbilt.edu anthro graduate current graduate students Vanderbilt University Department of Anthropology Current graduate students ref References r ... more details
in the book entitled The Ethnoarchaeology of Crow Village, Alaska ref Oswalt, Wendell H. & James W. Vanstone 1967 . The Ethnoarchaeology of Crow Village, Alaska Coyote Press. ref . This project pioneered ... more details
The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to archaeology Archaeology &ndash study of Homo genus human culture s through the recovery, documentation, and analysis of material remains and environmental data, including architecture , Artifact archaeology artifacts , Biofact archaeology biofact s, human remains, and landscapes . Essence of archaeology Main Archaeology Archaeological record Archaeological science Archaeological site Archaeological theory Artifact archaeology Artifact s Biofact archaeology Biofact s Excavation archaeology Excavation Branches of archaeology Archaeological practice Cultural Resources Management Archaeological ethics Urban archaeology Archaeological science Main Archaeological science Archaeometry Dendrochronology Isotope analysis Palynology Radiocarbon dating Zooarchaeology Geoarchaeology Bioarchaeology Archaeogenetics Computational archaeology Archaeological subdisciplines Ethnoarchaeology Taphonomy By location African archaeology Archaeology of the Americas Australian archaeology European archaeology Russian archaeology By time period Industrial archaeology Near Eastern archaeology Biblical archaeology Medieval archaeology Historical archaeology Post medieval archaeology Industrial archaeology Contemporary archaeology Specialities Aerial archaeology Archaeoastronomy Archaeological science Archaeozoology Archaeobotany or paleoethnobotany Battlefield archaeology Computational archaeology Experimental archaeology Environmental archaeology Forensic archaeology Landscape archaeology Maritime archaeology Museum Museum studies Palaeoarchaeology Paleopathology History of archaeology Main History of archaeology List of years in archaeology Archaeological methods Excavation archaeology Archaeological excavation Archaeological field survey Archaeological geophysics Underwater archaeology Archaeological theory Main Archaeological theory Great ages archaeology Functionalism sociology Functionalism Processualism New Archaeol ... more details
Many settlements in Greece had Greek language Greek and non Greek forms. Most of those names were in use during the multinational environment of the Ottoman Empire . Some of the forms were identifiably of Greek language Greek origin, others of South Slavic language Slavic , yet others of Turkish language Turkish , Aromanian language Vlach or Albanian language Albanian origin. Following the First World War and the Greco Turkish War 1919 1922 Graeco Turkish War which followed, an exchange of population took place between Greece, Yugoslavia , Bulgaria and Turkey Treaty of Neuilly , between Greece and Bulgaria and Treaty of Lausanne , between Greece and Turkey . The villages of the exchanged populations Bulgarians and Muslims in Greece were resettled with Greeks from Asia Minor, and the Balkans mainly from Bulgaria and Yugoslavia . As Greece transformed rapidly from a multi ethnic to a mono ethnic state ref Elisabeth Kontogiorgi, Population Exchange in Greek Macedonia The Forced Settlement of Refugees , Oxford University Press, 2006, The influx of Greek refugees coupled, with the departure of Muslims and pro Bulgarian Slav Macedonians, produced a radical ethnological impact whereas Macedonia was 42 per cent Greek in 1912, it was 89 per cent in 1926. ref the Greek government renamed many places with revived ancient names, local Greek language names, or translations of the non Greek names. The non Greek names were officially removed. ref name Bintliff Bintliff, The Ethnoarchaeology of a Passive Ethnicity , in K.S. Brown and Yannis Hamilakis, The Usable Past Greek Metahistories , Lexington Books, 2003, p. 138 This denial of the multiethnic composition of the rural landscape has been helped by state imposed systematic place name changes throughout this century, many as late as the 1960s, through which a wonderful scatter of traditional Greek, Slav, Albanian, and sometimes Italian village names has been suppressed&mdash wherever conceivable&mdash in favor of the name of any ... more details
Infobox Christian leader honorific prefix small His Beatitude small br name Ieronymos II title Archbishop of Athens image Archbishop Ieronymos II of Athens declaration ceremony 2008Feb12.jpg enthroned 7 February 2008 predecessor Archbishop Christodoulos of Athens Christodoulos ordination 1967 consecration 1981 other post Metropolitan Bishop of Thebes and Levadeia 1981 2008 Personal details birth name Ioannis Liapis birth date Birth date and age 1938 3 10 df y birth place Oinofyta , Viotia , Greece nationality Greek people Greek religion Orthodoxy residence parents profession Theology Theologian alma mater University of Athens signature Ieronymos II born March 10, 1938, Lang el B , Ier nymos lang la Hieronymus II , lang en Jerome II is the List of Archbishops of Athens Archbishop of Athens and All Greece and as such the Primate religion primate of the Autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Church Orthodox Church of Greece . He was elected on 7 February 2008. ref http www.cnn.com 2008 WORLD europe 02 07 greek.orthodox Greek Orthodox bishops elect leader , CNN.com europe. Accessed 7 February 2008. ref Early life and career He was born Ioannis Liapis Lang el , I nn s Li p s in Oinofyta , Boeotia Prefecture Boeotia . ref name http www.in.gr news article.asp?lngEntityID 871178&lngDtrID 244 , el icon , Accessed 7 February 2008. ref He is an Arvanites Arvanite . ref Bintliff, John 2003 , The Ethnoarchaeology of a Passive Ethnicity The Arvanites of Central Greece in K.S. Brown and Yannis Hamilakis, eds., The Usable Past Greek Metahistories, Lexington Books. p.139 ref Ieronymos holds degrees in archaeology , Byzantine Empire Byzantine studies , and theology from the University of Athens . He has undertaken postgraduate studies at the University of Graz , the University of Regensburg and the University of Munich . ref name Following a stint as lector in Christian archaeology at the Athe ... more details
Professor Martin Hall born in Guildford , ref name biography cite web publisher University of Salford url http www.corporate.salford.ac.uk leadership management martin hall biography title Biography Professor Martin Hall accessdate 2009 09 23 ref England is a British South African academic and educationalist who has written extensively on South African history, culture and higher education policy. He is currently Vice Chancellor of the University of Salford . ref name biography Early life Hall studied at Chichester High School For Boys , one of the two state schools in the United Kingdom at the time that prepared students for Oxbridge admission. ref name guardian cite news publisher The Guardian url http www.guardian.co.uk education 2008 nov 25 salford university martin hall vicechancellor title Ready for a chilly winter accessdate 2009 09 23 location London first Linda last Nordling date 2008 11 25 ref He was the first in his family to complete university. ref name guardian He completed his Bachelor s degree in Archaeology and Anthropology at Cambridge University in 1974. ref name UCTCV cite web publisher University of Cape Town url http www.uct.ac.za downloads email ABBREVIATED CV hall final 19072007.pdf title CV Professor Martin Hall accessdate 2009 09 23 Dead link date October 2010 bot H3llBot ref Early career He worked firstly in Lesotho in the area of Archaeological excavations and then in London for the Southwark Archaeological Rescue Unit. He moved to South Africa in 1975 where he worked for a five year period as an Ethnoarchaeology ethnoarchaeologist in Natal Museum in Pietermaritzburg . He completed his Doctoral studies at Cambridge in 1980 ref name UCTCV and moved to Cape Town in the same year. He then became Chief Professional Officer for the Department of Archaeology at the South African Museum . ref name UCTCV University of Cape Town He joined the University of Cape Town s Department of Archaeology in 1983 and was promoted from Associate Professor to P ... more details
Wiktionary guerrero Other uses Guerrero disambiguation Guerrero IPA es e re o is a surname of Spanish or Italian origin ref cite book last1 Smith first Elsdon C. first Edward E. title American Surnames year 1969 publisher Genealogical Publishing Co. location Baltimore isbn 0806311509 page 137 edition Fourth ref meaning warrior . ref cite book last1 Bryant first1 Douglas Donne last2 Calnek first3 Thomas A. last3 Lee, Jr. first4 Brian last4 Hayden title Archaeology, Ethnohistory, and Ethnoarchaeology in the Maya Highlands of Chiapas, Mexico year 1988 publisher New World Archaeological Foundation location Provo, UT page 28 url http books.google.co.uk books?id kgV6AAAAMAAJ&q Guerrero Warrior&dq Guerrero Warrior&hl en&ei OCZ TsrSB4m58gOg77GpAQ&sa X&oi book result&ct result&resnum 9&ved 0CFUQ6AEwCA accessdate 25 September 2011 ref br br This is a list of notable persons with the surname Guerrero . br Following Spanish naming customs , only individuals whose first or wiktionary paternal paternal family name is Guerrero are included . br br compactTOC8 side yes top yes num yes A Adabel Guerrero born 1978 , Argentine actress and singer Alex Guerrero born 1984 , American football player Alberto Guerrero 1886 1959 , Chilean Canadian musician Alberto Guerrero Mart nez 1878 1941 , Ecuadorian politician lvaro Guerrero born 1979 , Mexican actor ngel Sergio Guerrero Mier born 1935 , Mexican politician and lawyer Anuar Guerrero born 1979 , Colombian soccer player B Belem Guerrero born 1974 , Mexican track cyclist C Carlos Guerrero born 1957 , Mexican racing driver Carmen Guerrero Nakpil born 1922 , Filipino writer and historian Chavo Guerrero, Jr. born 1970 , Mexican American professional wrestler Chavo Guerrero, Sr. born 1949 , Mexican American professional wrestler Clara Guerrero born 1982 , Colombian bowler C. M. Guerrero , Cuban American photojournalist Cristian Guerrero born 1980 , Dominican baseball player D Dan Guerrero born 1951 , American athletic director Daniel Guerrer ... more details
ground . EthnoarchaeologyEthnoarchaeology is the archaeological study of living people. ref name ... and gathering or foraging societies. Ethnoarchaeology continues to be a vibrant component ... 2005 ref ref name kuznar2001 Kuznar 2001 ref Ethnoarchaeology is the use of ethnography to increase ..., ethnoarchaeology is the application of ethnography to archaeology. ref Ashcer 1961 as cited in Wylie ... more details