Home| All soft| Last soft| Your Orders| Customers opinion| Helpdesk| Cart

Program Search:


Shopping Cart:




*Note: Minimum order price: €20
We Recommend:

Carnegie Maya I-III ed. by John M. Weeks and Jane A. Hill PDF eBook €10 buy download

"Carnegie Maya I-III" ed. by John M. Weeks and Jane A. Hill
The Carnegie Institution of Washington:
Maya Research Program, 1913–1957.
Current Reports, 1952–1957.
Notes on Middle American Archaeology and Ethnology, 1940–1957.

Univ. Press of Colorado, AAUP | 2006/2011 | ISBN: 0870818341 0870818333 0870819585 1607320592 | 2117 pages | PDF | 31 MB

This complete set of reports from the Carnegie Institution's Maya program collects in one thematically and regionally organized volumes and fully searchable hundreds of documents from a foundational New World archaeological project.

Dispersed and out of print for fifty years, more than 350 reports from the Maya program are now available in this single volume.
Thematic and regional organization permits readers to monitor development of research concepts. Appendixes list all Carnegie Maya publications, Carnegie personnel, and the archival holdings of Carnegie-derived material at Harvard University, Tulane University, and the University of Chicago.

The second and third in a series of volumes intended to republish the primary data and interpretive studies produced by archaeologists and anthropologists in the Maya region.

Contents
Volume 1: The Carnegie Institution of Washington Maya Research Program, 1913–1957
Figures
Tables
Preface
Introduction
Tables
1.0. Administrative
2.0. Art and Architecture
3.0. Environment
4.0. Ceramics
5.0. Textiles
6.0. Hieroglyphic Writing
7.0. Linguistics
8.0. Ethnography
9.0. Ethnohistory
10.0. Physical Anthropology
11.0. Belize
12.0. Baking Pot
13.0. Pusilha
14.0. San Jose
15.0. Campeche
18.0. Chiapas
19.0. Bonampak
20.0. Yaxchilan
21.0. El Salvador
22.0. Guatemala
23.0. Kaminaljuyu
24.0. Sites near Lake Peten
25.0. La Muralla
26.0. Piedras Negras
27.0. Quirigua
28.0. Uaxactun
29.0. Zacualpa
30.0. Honduras
31.0. Copan
32.0. Nicaragua
33.0. Quintana Roo
34.0. Coba
35.0. Tabasco and Veracruz
36.0. Yucatan
37.0. Chacchob
38.0. Chichen Itza
39.0. Ek Balam
40.0. Mayapan
41.0. Uxmal
42.0. Yaxuna
Appendix
Glossary
References
Index

Volume 2: The Carnegie Institution of Washington Current Reports, 1952–1957
Figures
Foreword
Introduction
Preface
No. 1: Map of the Ruins of Mayapan,Yucatan, Mexico
No. 2: The Great Wall of Mayapan
No. 3: Residential Property Walls at Mayapan
No. 4: Excavations in House Mounds at Mayapan
No. 5: Cenote X-Coton at Mayapan
No. 6: Chacchob, Yucatan
No. 7: Archaeological Reconnaissance in Tabasco
No. 8: A Portal Vault and Temple at Mayapan
No. 9: Some Small Ceremonial Structures of Mayapan
No. 10: Excavations in House Mounds at Mayapan n
No. 11: The X-Coton Temples at Mayapan
No. 12: Cenote Exploration at Mayapan and Telchaquillo
No. 13: Boundary Walls and House Lots at Mayapan
No. 14: Three Temples and Their Associated Structures at Mayapan
No. 15: The Northern Terminus of the Principal Sacbe at Mayapan
No. 16: A Round Temple at Mayapan, Yucatan
No. 17: Excavations in House Mounds at Mayapan HI
No. 18: Exploration on the Outskirts of Mayapan
No. 19: A Presumed Residence of the Nobility at Mayapan
No. 20: The Temple of Kukulcan at Mayapan
No. 21: Excavations in Three Ceremonial Structures at Mayapan
No. 22: Colonnaded Buildings at Mayapan
No. 23: Exploration in Quintana Roo
No. 24: An Archaeological Reconnaissance of Northern Quintana Roo
No. 25: A Noble's Residence and Its Dependencies at Mayapan
No. 26: Early Ceramic Horizons at Mayapan and Santa Cruz
No. 27: Another Round Temple at Mayapan, Yucatan
No. 28: An Altar and Platform at Mayapan
No. 29: A Residential Quadrangle: Structures R-85 to R-90
No. 30: A Vaulted Temple at Mayapan
No. 31: Excavation of a Colonnaded Hall at Mayapan
No. 32: Three Serpent Column Temples and Associated Platforms at Mayapan
No. 33: A Dwelling and Shrine at Mayapan
No. 34: A Round Temple and Its Shrine at Mayapan
No. 35: Exploration of the Cave of Dzab-na, Tecoh, Yucatan
No. 36: Excavations in House Mounds at Mayapan IV
No. 37: The Southern Terminus of the Principal Sacbe at Mayapan, Group Z-50
No. 38: Skeletal Remains from Mayapan
No. 39: House Types in the Environs of Mayapan and at Uxmal, Kabah, Sayil, Chichen ttza, and Chacchob
No. 40: Deities Portrayed on Censers at Mayapan
No. 41: Notes on Vertebrate Animal Remains from Mayapan
Editor's Note
Appendix
Glossary
References
Index

Volume 3: Carnegie Institution of Washington Notes on Middle American Archaeology and Ethnology, 1940–1957
Figures
Tables
Introduction
Preface
No. 1. Clay Heads from Chiapas, Mexico
No. 2. Pottery from Champerico, Guatemala
No. 3. The Ruins of Culuba, Northeastern Yucatan
No. 4. The Missing Illustrations of the Pomar Relacion
No. 5. An Ethnological Note from Cilvituk, Southern Campeche
No. 6. The Prototype of the Mexican Codices Telleriano-Remensis and Vaticanus A
No. 7. Observations on Glyph G of the Lunar Series
No. 8. A New Pottery Style from the Department of Piura, Peru
No. 9. Archaeological Specimens from Yucatan and Guatemala
No. 10. The Payment of Tribute in the Codex Mendoza
No. 11. A Note on Aztec Chronology
No. 12. Representations of Tezcatlipoca at Chichen Rza
No. 13. A Theory of Maya ts-Sounds
No. 14. A Reconnaissance on Isla de Sacrificios, Veracruz, Mexico
No. 15. Pottery from the Pacific Slope of Guatemala
No. 16. Spindle Whorls from Chichen Rza, Yucatan
No. 17. Some Sculptures from Southeastern Quezaltenango, Guatemala
No. 18. The Initial Series of Stela 14, Piedras Negras, Guatemala, and a Date on Stela 19, Naranjo, Guatemala
No. 19. Representations of Tlalchitonatiuh at Chichen Itza, Yucatan, and at El Baul, Escuintla
No. 20. Maya Epigraphy: Directional Glyphs in Counting
No. 21. Notes on Sculpture and Architecture atTonala, Chiapas
No. 22. Maya Epigraphy: A Cycle of 819 Days
No. 23. The Periods of Tribute Collection in Moctezuma's Empire
No. 24. Notes on Glyph C of the Lunar Series at Palenque
No. 25. A Figurine Whistle Representing a Ball Game Player
No. 26. Notes on a West Coast Survival of the Ancient Mexican Ball Game
No. 27. Animal-Head Feet and a Bark-Beater in the Middle Usumacinta Region
No. 28. New Photographs and the Date of Stela 14, Piedras Negras
No. 29. Grooved Stone Axes from Central America
No. 30. A Vase from Sanimtaca, Alta Verapaz, Guatemala
No. 31. A Human-Effigy Pottery Figure from Chalchuapa, El Salvador
No. 32. A Preconquest Tomb on the Cerro del Zapote, El Salvador
No. 33. A Tentative Identification of the Head Variant for Eleven
No. 34. A Possible Lunar Series on the Leyden Plate
No. 35. Stucco Decoration of Early Guatemala Pottery
No. 36. Certain Pottery Vessels from Copan
No. 37. Archaeological Specimens from Guatemala
No. 38. Jottings on Inscriptions at Copan
No. 39. The Dating of Seven Monuments at Piedras Negras
No. 40. Archaeological Finds near Douglas, British Honduras
No. 41. The Vienna Dictionary
No. 42. Ixtla Weaving at Chiquilistlan, Jalisco
No. 43. Worked Gourds from Jalisco
No. 44. The Graphic Style of the Tlalhuica
No. 45. Variant Methods of Date Recordingsin the Jatate Drainage, Chiapas
No. 46. The Venus Calendar of the Aztec
No. 47. An Inscription on a Jade Probably Carved at Piedras Negras
No. 48. Costumes and Wedding Customs at Mixco, Guatemala
No. 49. Combinations of Glyphs G and F in the Supplementary Series
No. 50. Moon Age Tables
No. 51. A Second Tlaloc Gold Plaque from Guatemala
No. 52. Rock Paintings at Texcalpintado, Morelos, Mexico
No. 53. A Pyrite Mirror from Queretaro, Mexico
No. 54. Informe sobre la existencia de jugadores de pelota mayas en la ceramica escultorica de Jaina
No. 55. Un sello cilindrico con barras y puntos
No. 56. The Inscription on the Altar of Zoomorph 0, Quirigua
No. 57. Archaeological Discovery at Finca Arizona, Guatemala
No. 58. The Initial and Supplementary Series of Stela 5 at Altar de Sacrificios, Guatemala
No. 59. Mausolea in Central Veracruz
No. 60. Archaeological Material from theClub Internacional, El Salvador
No. 61. Some Uses of Tobacco among the Maya
No. 62. Observations on Altar Sites in the Quiche Region, Guatemala
No. 63. Tattooing and Scarification among the Maya
No. 64. The Tamiahua Codices
No. 65. The Malinche of Acacingo, Estado de Mexico
No. 66. Three Zapotec Stones
No. 67. Blowguns in Guatemala
No. 68. A Reconnaissance of El Rincon del Jicaque, Honduras
No. 69. "Rim-Head" Vessels from Kaminaljuyu, Guatemala
No. 70. Some Mexican Figurines of the Colonial Period
No. 71. The Dating of Structure 44, Yaxchilan, and Its Bearing on the Sequence of Texts at That Site
No. 72. The Codex of the Derrumbe del Templo Mayor
No. 73. Some Examples of Yeztla-Naranjo Geometric Ware
No. 74. The Treble Scroll Symbol in the Teotihuacan and Zapotec Cultures
No. 75. The Book of Chilam Balam of Ixil
No. 76. The "Tortuga" of Coatlan del Rio, Morelos
No. 77. Drawings of Tajumulco Sculptures
No. 78. Otomi Looms and Quechquemitls from San Pablito, State of Puebla, and from Santa Ana Hueytlalpan, State of Hidalgo, Mexico
No. 79. Maya Calendar Round Dates Such as 9 Ahau 17 Mol
No. 80. Stone Objects from Cocula and Chilacachapa, Guerrero
No. 81. Easter Ceremonies at San Antonio Palopo, Guatemala
No. 82. Cuchumatan Textiles: The Course of an Error
No. 83. Representations of Temple Buildings as Decorative Patterns on Teotihuacan Pottery and Figurines
No. 84. The Codex of Tonayan
No. 85. Elements of Maya Arithmetic with Particular Attention to the Calendar
No. 86. Certain Types of Stamped Decoration on Pottery from the Valley of Mexico
No. 87. Observation of the Sun among the Ixil of Guatemala
No. 88. Some Remarks on Maya Arithmetic
No. 89. Kaminaljuyu, Guatemala: Addenda and Corrienda
No. 90. Did the Maya Have a Zero? The Meanings of Our Zero and the Maya "Zero" Symbols
No. 91. Jades from Guatemala
No. 92. Certain Archaeological Specimens from Guatemala I
No. 93. Some New Discoveries at Coba
No. 94. Tlaloc Incensarios in the Baratta Collection, El Salvador
No. 95. Certain Archaeological Specimens from Guatemala n
No. 96. Tlaloc Effigy Jar from the Guatemala National Museum
No. 97. Rim-Head Vessels and Cone-Shaped Effigy Prongsof the Preclassic Period at Kaminaljuyu, Guatemala
No. 98. A Polychrome Maya Plate from Quintana Roo
No. 99. "Olmec" Pictographs in the Las Victorias Group, Chalchuapa Archaeological Zone, El Salvador
No. 100. A Group of Jointed Figurines in the Guatemala National Museum
No. 101. A Study of Three-Pronged Incense Burners From Guatemala and Adjacent Areas
No. 102. Some Archaeological Specimens from Pomona, British Honduras
No. 103. "Loop-Nose" Incense Burners in the Guatemala National Museum
No. 104. Ethnological Material from British Honduras
No. 105. Further Notes on Three-Pronged Incense Burners and Rim-Head Vessels in Guatemala
No. 106. Notice to Replace Note 106
No. 107. The Ruins of Cotio, Department of Guatemala, Guatemala
No. 108. A Possible Early Classic Site in Northern Yucatan
No. 109. Waxen Idols and a Sacrificial Rite on the Lacandon
No. 110. The Introduction of Puuc Style of Dating at Yaxchilan
No. 111. Zutugil Dugout Canoes
No. 112. The Survival of the Maya Tun Count in Colonial Times
No. 113. A Decorated Vessel Support from Acapulco, Mexico
No. 114. The Language of the Archaeologic Huastecs
No. 115. A Stela at San Lorenzo, Southeastern Campeche
No. 116. Ceremonial or Formal Archway, Uxmal
No. 117. Miscellaneous Archaeological Specimens from Mesoamerica
No. 118. Pottery Specimens from Guatemala I
No. 119. Drawings of Glyphs of Structure XVin, Palenque
No. 120. Memoranda on Some Dates at Palenque
No. 121. Snares and Traps in Codex Madrid
No. 122. Two New Gallery-Patio Type Structures at Chichen Itza
No. 123. Easter Ceremonies at Santiago Atitlan in 1930
No. 124. Pottery Specimens from Guatemala n
No. 125. Pottery Vessels from Campeche
No. 126. Selected Pottery from Tabasco
No. 127. Chronological Decipherments from Uaxactun, Naranjo, and Ixlu, Peten
No. 128. Notes on the Use of Cacao in Middle America
No. 129. Tohil Plumbate and Classic Maya Polychrome Vessels in the Marquez Collection
No. 130. A New Inscription from the Temple of the Foliated Cross at Palenque
No. 131. The Marquez Collection of X Fine Orange Polychrome Vessels
References
Index
with TOC BookMarkLinks






Download File Size:29.47 MB


Carnegie Maya I-III ed. by John M. Weeks and Jane A. Hill PDF eBook
€10
Customers who bought this program also bought:

Home| All Programs| Today added Progs| Your Orders| Helpdesk| Shopping cart      





Adobe Photoshop 2022 €90

             

Adobe Illustrator 2022 €75






Windows 11 With Office 2021 €168


Adobe Master Collection 2022 €265


CineSamples CineStrings €55






Autodesk Revit 2023 €140

             

Autodesk Product Design Suite Ultimate €252