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Recent Publications

Thomas A. Wake (In Preparation) Early Formative Vertebrate Exploitation at Paso de la Amada, Chiapas, Mexico. In Maya Zooarchaeology: New Directions in Method and Theory, edited by Kitty F. Emery. UCLA Institute of Archaeology Publications.

Thomas A. Wake and Dwight D. Simons. (In Preparation) Environmental Implications of the Extra-limital Archaeological Presence of Mountain Beaver (Aplodontia rufa) Remains at Duncan's Point Cave, Sonoma County, California. Journal of Mammalogy.

Thomas A. Wake, Marvalee H. Wake, and Richard G. Lesure. * (In Review) A Mexican Archaeological Site Yields The First Quaternary Fossil Record For Caecilians. Quaternary Research.

Brian F. Byrd, L. Mark Raab, Seetha N. Reddy, and Thomas A. Wake * (In Review) Late Holocene Maritime Foraging Variability: An Example from Coastal Southern California. American Antiquity.

Kenneth W. Gobalet and Thomas A. Wake * (In Review) Archaeological Fish Remains from the Shores of Ancient Lake Cahuilla, Salton Basin, Southern California. Southwestern Naturalist.

Thomas A. Wake and Dwight D. Simons. * (In Review) Mid-Holocene Subsistence Strategies and Topographic Change on the Northern California Coast: A Case Study from Duncan's Point Cave. Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology.

Thomas A. Wake * (In Review) Spatio-Temporal Variation in Camp Pendleton Vertebrate Archaeofaunas. Pacific Coast Archaeological Society Quarterly.

Thomas A. Wake and Lady R. Harrington (In Press) Vertebrate Faunal Remains From La Blanca, Guatemala. In Early Complex Society in Pacific Guatemala: Settlements and Chronology of the Rio Naranjo, Guatemala, edited by Michael W. Love. Papers of the New World Archaeological Foundation.

Thomas A. Wake. * (In Press) Exploitation of Tradition: Bone Tool Production and Use at Fort Ross, California. In Making Culture: Essays on Technological Practice, Politics, and World Views, edited by Marcia-Ann Dobres and Chris Hoffman. Smithsonian Institution Press.

Thomas A. Wake. (In Press) Acculturation and Food: A Study of Dietary Patterns Observed at Fort Ross, California. In Proceedings of the 25th Annual (1991) Chacmool Conference. The Archaeological Association of the University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta.

Thomas A. Wake. 1997 Subsistence, Ethnicity, and Vertebrate Exploitation at the Ross Colony. In The Archaeology of Russian Colonialism in the North and Tropical Pacific, edited by Peter R. Mills and Antoinette Martinez. Kroeber Anthropological Society Papers 81:84-115.

Kent G. Lightfoot, Ann M. Schiff, and Thomas A. Wake (Editors). 1997 The Native Alaskan Neighborhood: A Multiethnic Community at Colony Ross. The Archaeology and Ethnohistory of Fort Ross, California, Volume 2. Contributions of the University of California Archaeological Research Facility, Number 55.

Thomas A. Wake. 1997 Bone Artifacts and Tool Production in the Native Alaskan Neighborhood. In The Native Alaskan Neighborhood: A Multiethnic Community at Colony Ross. The Archaeology and Ethnohistory of Fort Ross, California, Volume 2. Edited by K.G. Lightfoot, A.M. Schiff, and T.A. Wake, Pp. 248-278. Contributions of the University of California Archaeological Research Facility, Number 55.

Thomas A. Wake. 1997 Mammal Remains from The Native Alaskan Neighborhood. In The Native Alaskan Neighborhood: A Multiethnic Community at Colony Ross. The Archaeology and Ethnohistory of Fort Ross, California, Volume 2. Edited by K.G. Lightfoot, A.M. Schiff, and T.A. Wake, Pp. 279-309. Contributions of the University of California Archaeological Research Facility, Number 55.

Kent G. Lightfoot, Ann M. Schiff, Antoinette Martinez, Thomas A. Wake, Steven W. Silliman, Peter R. Mills, and Lisa Holm. 1997 Culture Change and Persistence in the Daily Lifeways of Interethnic Households. In The Native Alaskan Neighborhood: A Multiethnic Community at Colony Ross. The Archaeology and Ethnohistory of Fort Ross, California, Volume 2. Edited by K.G. Lightfoot, A.M. Schiff, and T.A. Wake, Pp. 355-419. Contributions of the University of California Archaeological Research Facility, Number 55.

Kent G. Lightfoot, Ann M. Schiff, and Thomas A. Wake 1997 Conclusion. In The Native Alaskan Neighborhood: A Multiethnic Community at Colony Ross. The Archaeology and Ethnohistory of Fort Ross, California, Volume 2. Edited by K.G. Lightfoot, A.M. Schiff, and T.A. Wake, Pp. 420-429. Contributions of the University of California Archaeological Research Facility, Number 55.

Thomas A. Wake. 1995 Review of Whaling and Sealing Sites in South Australia. Parry Kostoglou and Justin McCarthy, editors. Australian Institute for Maritime Archaeology, Special Publication, Number 6. Journal of Historical Archaeology 29(1):112-114.

Thomas A. Wake. 1994 Social Implications of Mammal Remains from Fort Ross, California. Proceedings of the Society for California Archaeology 7:19-32.

* Kent G. Lightfoot, Thomas A. Wake, and Ann M. Schiff. 1993 Native Responses to the Russian Mercantile Colony of Ross in Northern California. Journal of Field Archaeology 20(2):159-175.

Jay S. Noller, Kent G. Lightfoot, K.A. Wickens, K.I. Kelson, Thomas A. Wake, and E. Breck Parkman. 1993 Preliminary Results of Geoarchaeologic Investigations Along the Northern San Andreas Fault Zone, Fort Ross State Historic Park, California. Proceedings of the Society for California Archaeology 6:249-256.

Kent G. Lightfoot, Thomas A. Wake, and Ann M. Schiff. 1991 Introduction to the Fort Ross Archaeological Project. The Archaeology and Ethnohistory of Fort Ross, California, Volume 1. Contributions of the University of California Archaeological Research Facility, Number 49.

* Thomas A. Wake, David B. Wake, and Marvalee H. Wake. 1983 The Ossification Sequence of Aneides lugubris, With Comments on Heterochrony. Journal of Herpetology 17(1):10-22.

 

 

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