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别人发给我的, pueblo rooms,非常接近
Abstract
Researchers in Southwestern archaeology have long sought to reconstruct social organization through the analysis of Puebloan room use and function. Though numerous variables have been used to classify room types, unworked animal bone has consistently been overlooked as an applicable data set with which to determine the function of prehistoric pueblo rooms. An analysis of floor assemblages from Rattlesnake Point Pueblo (AZ Q: 11:118 [ASM]) suggests that basic differences exist in the distribution of fauna among room types. These differences form relatively distinct "faunal signatures" that may be used to assign room function in the absence of diagnostic architectural or artifactual data.
A revised approach to room classification emerged in the 1950s (Martin and Rinaldo 1960; Martin et al. 1961). Instead of typing rooms solely by architectural characteristics, associations between room features and artifact distributions were examined to interpret prehistoric behavior (Rock 1974; Sullivan 1974). Martin and Rinaldo (1960) used this type of "inventory approach" to identify habitation and storage areas at Table Rock Pueblo based on the presence or absence of ground
https://www.jstor.org/stable/30246270?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
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