List of Figures
Acknowledgements
Preface
1. Temples of Wind and Rain
2. Lost in Ancient America
3. Dark Secrets of the Crystal Maiden
4. Mesoamerican Cults and Cities
5. Across the Chichimec Sea
6. Ballcourts at Snaketown
7. A Place Beyond the Horizon
8. The Other Corn Road
9. Paddling North
10. Legacies of Thunderers
11. First Medicine
12. The Wind in the Shell
Further Reading
Notes
Timothy R. Pauketat is Professor of Anthropology and Medieval Studies at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. He previous publications include The Archaeology of Ancient North America, The Oxford Handbook of North American Archaeology (as editor), and Cahokia: Ancient America's Great City on the Mississippi.
Readers interested in pre-Columbian North America will be
enlightened by this bold study.
*Publishers Weekly*
A grand narrative of the thousand years in North America before
Columbus. Blends Native accounts and cosmologies, and archaeology,
and ethnohistory. A landmark for the deep history of our
continent
*Stephen H. Lekson, University of Colorado*
This remarkable work of synthesis demonstrates the power of
archaeological research in bringing to light key social and
ecological transformations in North America, between 800 and 1300
AD; the results are truly staggering and place the contemporaneous
history of medieval Eurasia in an entirely new perspective.
*David Wengrow, Institute of Archaeology, University College
London*
Pauketat offers a complex and extraordinarily rich narrative
detailing how Indigenous peoples of ancient America celebrated and
ritualized water as a response to climate change. He entangles
seemingly disparate peoples of ancient North and Central America by
making climatic events and processes - such as the
evapotranspiration cycle and the Medieval Warm Period - as key
actors in the histories of the ancient Maya, Aztec, and
Mississippian peoples. And by exploring these processes within the
ontological dimensions of Indigenous experience, Pauketat
masterfully demonstrates the intersections of spirituality and
science, or what contemporary Indigenous peoples describe as
traditional ecological knowledge. In doing so, he makes clear that
the language of water rights and movements such as Mní Wičhóni
(Water is Life) have a much deeper past in which climate history
has always been human history.
*Patrick Bottiger, Kenyon College*
Finally, after decades of sidestepping by archaeologists, Pauketat
has finally brought to light the question of interaction between
Mesoamerica and the American Bottom city of Cahokia. Even at
present, extensive research in archaeology is focused on the ties
between Northwest Mexico and the American Southwest, while we have
been waiting for someone to break the ice on the fundamental
problem of Mesoamerica's possible connections beyond its
northeastern frontier. Pauketat takes the reader on a personal
journey as he delves into this perplexing inquiry with a sharp mind
that arrives at fascinating insights and conclusions.
*Peter F. Jimenez, author of The Mesoamerican World System,
200-1200 CE*
The book is a rich assemblage of sources and stories, giving a
vivid impression of the ritual practices of 'Medieval America' and
beyond and brings forth many thought-provoking ideas.
*Antiquity*
The author and Oxford University Press should be commended for
broadening our methodological approach to North American ancient
cultures and history with this volume.
*Minerva Magazine*
This volume will be valuable for archaeologists and their students
involved in the study of the effects of climate change on the
prehistory of North America.
*Choice*
This accessible and well-written travelogue boldly frames the
hypothesis that late medieval Indigenous eastern North Americans
embraced rain-bringing wind gods, originally conceived in
Mesoamerica, along with maize agriculture.
*American Antiquity*
Enchanting... A bold provocation, couched in energetic prose and
cast in a deeply informed sweep across ancient North America...
Shake[s] us from long standing ideas about the cultural boundness
of Pre-Columbian Indigenous polities and peoples.
*Journal of Southern History*
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