Florence Hawley Ellis (1906–1991)
Auteur de San Gabriel Del Yungue : As Seen by an Archaeologist (1989)
A propos de l'auteur
Œuvres de Florence Hawley Ellis
Twelve centuries in northern New Mexico : a quick glimpse of twelve centuries of human adaptation in New Mexico's… (1982) 7 exemplaires
A Reconstruction of the Basic Jemez Pattern of Social Organization, with Comparisons to Other Tanoan Social Struct. 4 exemplaires
From Drought to Drought: An Archaeological Record of Life Patterns As Developed by the Gallina Indians of North Central… (1988) 4 exemplaires
Collected papers in honor of Florence Hawley Ellis 4 exemplaires
#9954, Some Notable Paralels between Pueblo and Mexican Pantheons and Ceremonies: Anthropology Teaching Museum Research… 2 exemplaires
Florence Hawley Ellis Archives : Maxwell Museum of Anthropology, University of New Mexico : A Guide to Santo Domingo… 1 exemplaire
From Drought to Drought Gallina Culture Patterns, Canjilon Mountain Hunting and Gathering Sites, An Archaeological… 1 exemplaire
Jemez Kiva Magic and its Relation to Features of Prehistoric Kivas in the Southwestern Journal of Anthropology, v. 8… 1 exemplaire
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Date de naissance
- 1906-09-17
- Date de décès
- 1991
- Sexe
- female
- Nationalité
- USA
- Lieu de naissance
- Cananea, Mexico
- Études
- University of Chicago (MA, PhD)
- Professions
- anthropologist
archeologist
professor - Organisations
- University of New Mexico
- Courte biographie
- Florence Hawley Ellis was born in Cananea, Sonora, Mexico, where her father was chief chemist for a copper mine. She was a small child at the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution in 1913, when her family moved to Miami, Arizona. She majored in English at the University of Arizona, graduating in 1927. A year later, she received her M.A. with a thesis entitled "Pottery and Cultures of the Middle Gila." She became one of the first women to earn a Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Chicago in 1934, based on research she had done at Chetro Ketl at Chaco Canyon in New Mexico. In 1934, she joined the faculty of the University of New Mexico, where she taught for more than 35 years. In 1936, she married Donovan Senter, an archeologist, with whom she had a daughter; in 1950, after a divorce from Senter, she married Bruce Ellis, an historian, and took his surname. She took part in and led many field excavations around the USA, and became a pioneer in dendrochronology (a method of dating using tree rings), chemical analysis, and ethno-archeology. In 1971, near the end of her teaching career, she and her students discovered an archeological treasure trove of ceramic pots hidden in a lava field north of the Ghost Ranch in Abiquiu, NM, that rocked the world of anthropology. She published dozens of scholarly articles, and among her books were From Drought to Drought: An Archaeological Record of Life Patterns (1988), San Gabriel Del Yungue as Seen by an Archaeologist: Examination of an Historic Site in New Mexico (1989), and Pueblo Indians: Archaeologic and Ethnologic Data: Acoma-Laguna Land Claims (1977). After her nominal retirement from UNM, she often served as an expert witness for Pueblo land claims.
Membres
Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 15
- Membres
- 43
- Popularité
- #352,016
- ISBN
- 4