I. Introduction --;1. Theorizing Variations in Andean Sociopolitical Organization --;II. Early Andean Civilizations --;2. The Sechín Alto Complex and Its Place Within Casma Valley Initial Period Development --;3. Out in the Streets of Moche: Urbanism and Sociopolitical Organization at a Moche IV Urban Center --;4. Power and Social Ranking at the End of the Formative Period: The Lower Lurín Valley Cemeteries --;5. Nasca Settlement and Society on the Hundredth Anniversary of Uhle's Discovery of the Nasca Style --;III. Traditions of Imperialism in the Andes --;6. Tiwanaku Political Economy --;7. Iwawi and Tiwanaku --;8. Imperial Interaction in the Andes: Huari and Tiwanaku at Cerro Baúl --;9. The Huaro Archaeological Site Complex: Rethinking the Huari Occupation of Cuzco --;10. The Archaeology of Inca Origins: Excavations at Chokepukio, Cuzco, Peru --;11. Catequil: The Archaeology, Ethnohistory, and Ethnography of a Major Provincial Huaca --;IV. Solving Puzzles of the Past --;12. Tracking the Source of Quispisisa Obsidian from Huancavelica to Ayacucho --;V. Conclusion --;13. Writing the Andes with a Capital 'A'
SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
Study of the origin and development of civilization is of unequaled importance for understanding the cultural processes that create human societies.