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Dive into the research topics where Barbara J. Mills is active.

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Featured researches published by Barbara J. Mills.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Transformation of social networks in the late pre-Hispanic US Southwest.

Barbara J. Mills; Jeffery J. Clark; Matthew A. Peeples; W. R. Haas; John M. Roberts; J. Brett Hill; Deborah L. Huntley; Lewis Borck; Ronald L. Breiger; Aaron Clauset; M. Steven Shackley

The late pre-Hispanic period in the US Southwest (A.D. 1200–1450) was characterized by large-scale demographic changes, including long-distance migration and population aggregation. To reconstruct how these processes reshaped social networks, we compiled a comprehensive artifact database from major sites dating to this interval in the western Southwest. We combine social network analysis with geographic information systems approaches to reconstruct network dynamics over 250 y. We show how social networks were transformed across the region at previously undocumented spatial, temporal, and social scales. Using well-dated decorated ceramics, we track changes in network topology at 50-y intervals to show a dramatic shift in network density and settlement centrality from the northern to the southern Southwest after A.D. 1300. Both obsidian sourcing and ceramic data demonstrate that long-distance network relationships also shifted from north to south after migration. Surprisingly, social distance does not always correlate with spatial distance because of the presence of network relationships spanning long geographic distances. Our research shows how a large network in the southern Southwest grew and then collapsed, whereas networks became more fragmented in the northern Southwest but persisted. The study also illustrates how formal social network analysis may be applied to large-scale databases of material culture to illustrate multigenerational changes in network structure.


Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory | 1997

Accumulations research: Problems and prospects for estimating site occupation span

Mark D. Varien; Barbara J. Mills

Accumulations research examines the dynamic relationship among artifact discard, duration of occupation, and population size. The history of accumulations research is reviewed, emphasizing studies that use accumulation rates to measure site occupation span. Ethnoarchaeological and experimental research demonstrates that cooking pots are an ideal artifact type for accumulations research. Data from the Duckfoot site in southwestern Colorado are used to develop an annual accumulation rate of cooking pot sherds for households. This rate is used, along with population estimates and estimates of the total cooking pot sherd accumulation, to determine the occupation span of five sites located in the nearby Dolores River valley.


Journal of Archaeological Research | 2002

Recent Research on Chaco: Changing Views on Economy, Ritual, and Society

Barbara J. Mills

Current research on Chaco Canyon and its surrounding outlier communities is at an important juncture. Rather than trying to argue for the presence or absence of complexity, archaeologists working in the area are asking different questions, especially how Chacoan political, economic, ritual, and social organization were structured. These lines of inquiry do not attempt to pigeonhole Chaco into traditional neoevolutionary types, but instead seek to understand the historical trajectory that led to the construction of monumental architecture in Chaco Canyon and a large part of the northern Southwest in the 10th through 12th centuries. This review discusses the conclusions of current research at Chaco including definitions of the Chaco region, recent fieldwork, histories of Chaco archaeology, chronology, paleoenvironmental reconstruction, demography, political organization, outlier communities, economic organization, social organization, ritual, violence, and the post-Chacoan reorganization. Although many issues are hotly debated, there is a growing concensus that power was not based in a centralized political organization and that ritual organization was a key factor in the replication of Chacoan architecture across a vast regional landscape. Exactly how ritual, social, and political organization intersected is a central question for Chaco scholars. The resolution of this problem will prove to be of interest to all archaeologists working with intermediate societies across the globe.


American Antiquity | 2007

Performing the feast: Visual display and suprahousehold commensalism in the Puebloan Southwest

Barbara J. Mills

Ceramic bowls from the Greater Southwest are used to show how changes in the exterior decoration of serving vessels are associated with the proxemics of ritual performances. Across the northern Southwest the first use of exterior designs and polychrome ceramics is during the Pueblo III period, which corresponds to a shift in settlement aggregation and the use of open plaza spaces. With the transition to the more enclosed plazas of the Early Pueblo IV period, smaller and less visible exterior designs were used. The trend reversed itself with the use of larger plazas at later Pueblo IV period sites, where serving bowls with greater visual impact were used. Panregional trends are bolstered by a case study from the Mogollon Rim region of Arizona to show how changes in the visual performance characteristics of bowls are associated with the spatial and social proxemics of suprahousehold feasting rituals. I use several characteristics of serving bowls including their size, slip colors, paint and slip contrasts, and the size of exterior designs. These are related to the size and diversity of performance spaces, including plazas, and to other evidence for changes in feasting practices, such as roasting features and faunal remains. I conclude that the changes seen in serving vessels are important for looking at shifts in the scale, visibility, and diversity of public gatherings within Ancestral Pueblo social and ritual trajectories.


American Antiquity | 2015

Multiscalar perspectives on social networks in the late Prehispanic Southwest

Barbara J. Mills; Matthew A. Peeples; W. Randall Haas; Lewis Borck; Jeffery J. Clark; John M. Roberts

Abstract Analyzing historical trajectories of social interactions at varying scales can lead to complementary interpretations of relationships among archaeological settlements. We use social network analysis combined with geographic information systems at three spatial scales over time in the western U.S. Southwest to show how the same social processes affected network dynamics at each scale. The period we address, A.D. 1200–1450, was characterized by migration and demographic upheaval. The tumultuous late thirteenth-century interval was followed by population coalescence and the development of widespread religious movements in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. In the southern Southwest these processes resulted in a highly connected network that drew in members of different settlements within and between different valleys that had previously been distinct. In the northern Southwest networks were initially highly connected followed by a more fragmented social landscape. We examine how different network textures emerged at each scale through 50-year snapshots. The results demonstrate the usefulness of applying a multiscalar approach to complex historical trajectories and the potential for social network analysis as applied to archaeological data.


Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory | 2000

The social and historical context of short-term stylistic replacement: A Zuni case study

Margaret A. Hardin; Barbara J. Mills

Large collections of ethnographic ceramics created over multiyear periods of intensive collecting provide a way to bridge discrepancies between the temporal scales of ethnographic studies based on single field visits and archaeological analyses of assemblages accumulated over much longer periods of time. The Smithsonians Stevenson collections of Zuni ceramics, consisting of 3500 vessels, were assembled in three intensive field seasons over a 6-year period. They are particularly useful for addressing questions about rates of stylistic change and the relative use-lives of vessel forms and sizes with known ethnographic functions.


Radiocarbon | 2008

CALENDAR AGE OF LISAKOVSKY TIMBERS ATTRIBUTED TO ANDRONOVO COMMUNITY OF BRONZE AGE IN EURASIA

Irina P. Panyushkina; Barbara J. Mills; Emma Usmanova; Li Cheng

We measured radiocarbon ages of 22 decadal replications and 1 bulk group from 5 tree-ring specimens using acid-base-acid pretreatment and accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). The study has the goal of refining the precision and resolution of a segment of the conventional Bronze Age chronology in the Eurasian steppe attributed to the multicultural com- munity known as Andronovo. The archaeological timbers were gathered from 3 cemeteries at the Lisakovsky cluster of sites in Kazakhstan, where there is a prominent Andronovo occurrence that appears to show evidence of overlapping Alakul and Fedorovo cultures in the southern margin of the Eurasian steppe. The new set of Andronovo calendar dates derived from 14C wiggles and a composite floating tree-ring chronology places the cultural overlap from 1780 to 1660 cal BC. Results indicate older ages of artifacts from the Lisakovsky site than were previously determined by the typological chronology, shifting them from the Late Bronze Age to also include the transition between the Middle and Late Bronze Age. The chronological order of the Lisakovsky cemeteries provides strong evidence of contemporaneity of the Alakul and Fedorovo cultures in the Tobol River Valley for a portion of the 120-yr period of occupation. We discuss an application of the dated Alakul-Fedorovo overlap to the relationship and origin of different groups of the Andronovo community in the Ural region. Our results demonstrate the substantial power that tree rings from Bronze Age timbers provide for developing a precise and highly resolved calendar chro- nology of prehistoric human occupation in the Eurasian steppe during the 2nd millennium BC.


KIVA | 1997

Sourcing Chuskan Ceramic Production: Petrographic and Experimental Analyses

Barbara J. Mills; Andrea J. Carpenter; William Grimm

ABSTRACTChuskan ceramics are often used as a classic example of the usefulness of temper analyses to identify the large-scale distribution of vessels from their locus of production. Although the general production location of Chuskan ceramics in the Chuska Mountains has been known since Shepards pioneering work, specific sources of the igneous rock within this broad area have not been systematically investigated. We suggest that the paucity of clear-cut matches in previous analyses of archaeological and geological materials is owing to (1) limited geological sampling, and (2) a lack of consideration of the effects of temper-processing activities in ceramic production. We use petrographic and experimental approaches on an extensive geological sample to argue for at least one likely source for the Chuskan tempers.


KIVA | 1991

AN ASSESSMENT OF THE RESEARCH POTENTIAL OF MUSEUM COLLECTIONS: THE BABBITT COLLECTION AT THE MUSEUM OF NORTHERN ARIZONA

Christine E. Goetze; Barbara J. Mills

Methods for assessing the research potential of anthropological museum collections are an important first step in using these collections for scientific research. Preliminary assessments are especially needed for casual collections, which often do not have the same amount of documentation as more systematic collections. Here, we present a method for evaluating the representativeness of collections of whole ceramic vessels using the Babbitt Collection at the Museum of Northern Arizona. Quantitative comparisons are made to more systematically collected vessel assemblages from the Colorado Plateaus to assess collector bias in the sizes of vessels retained in the collection. We conclude that there is no reason to reject the Babbitt Collection as representative of functional classes of ceramic vessels found elsewhere in the Sinagua and Tusayan areas.


Antiquity | 2018

Evaluating Chaco migration scenarios using dynamic social network analysis

Barbara J. Mills; Matthew A. Peeples; Leslie Aragon; Benjamin A. Bellorado; Jeffery J. Clark; Evan Giomi; Thomas C. Windes

Migration was a key social process contributing to the creation of the ‘Chaco World’ between AD 800 and 1200. Dynamic social network analysis allows for evaluation of several migration scenarios, and demonstrates that Chaco’s earliest ninth-century networks show interaction with areas to the west and south, rather than migration to the Canyon from the Northern San Juan. By the late eleventh century, Chaco Canyon was tied strongly to the Middle and Northern San Juan, while a twelfth-century retraction of networks separated the Northern and Southern San Juan areas prior to regional depopulation. Understanding Chaco migration is important for comprehending both its uniqueness in U.S. Southwest archaeology and for comparison with other case studies worldwide.

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John M. Roberts

University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee

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