Daniela Triadan

Office: Anthropology 413 Phone: 520-626-0077
Daniela Triadan
Email:
dtriadan@email.arizona.edu
Degrees:
Ph.D. Freie Universität Berlin, 1995
Affiliation:

Assistant Professor, Department of Anthropology
Research Associate, Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural
History, Smithsonian Institution

Interests:
Archaeology, Southwest and Mesoamerica, ceramic production and distribution, compositional analyses, economic organization.
Classes:
TRAD 101, Patterns in Prehistory
Anthropology 205, Clovis to Coronado: Archaeology of the Southwest
Anthropology 320, The Earliest Civilizations
Anthropology 696a, Household Archaeology

Current Research:

Polychrome Ceramic Production and Distribution in Chihuahua, Mexico (NSF funded); Classic Maya household organization at Aguateca, Guatemala(NSF funded).


Recent Major Publications:

in press (with T. Inomata) The Effects and Limitations of Cultural Codes in Maya Warfare. To be published in a volume on practice theory and warfare, edited by W. Walker and A. Nielsen. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.
in press Painted, Patterned, and Plain: Sources of Ceramic Assemblage Variability. To be published in a conference volume, edited by A. Sullivan III. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City
in press Dancing Gods: Ritual, Performance, and Political Organization in the Prehistoric Southwest. In Theatres of Power and Community: Archaeology of Performance and Politics, edited by T. Inomata and L.  Coben. Altamira Press, Walnut Creek, CA.
2004 (with M. N. Zedeño) The Political Geography and Territoriality of 14th Century Settlements in the Mogollon Highlands of East-central Arizona. In Cluster Analysis: The History and Organization of Pueblo IV Period (A.D. 1275-1540) Settlement Clusters in the American Southwest, edited by E. Charles Adams and Andrew I. Duff, pp. 95-107. University of Arizona Press, Tucson.
2004

(with T. Inomata) What Did They Do and Where? Activity Areas and Residue Analyses in Maya Archaeology. In Continuities and Changes in Maya Archaeology: Perspectives at the Millenium, edited by C. Golden and G. Borgstede, pp. 243-255. Routledge, New York.

2003 (with T. Inomata) Where did Elites Live? Analysis of Possible Elite Residences at Aguateca, Guatemala. In Maya Palaces and Elite Residences: An Interdisciplinary Approach , edited by J. J. Christie, pp. 154-183. University of Texas Press, Austin.
2003 (with M. N. Zedeño and R. L. Bishop) Interpretations of Compositional Analysis in Archaeology. In Patterns and Process, edited by L. van Zelst, pp.27-55. Smithsonian Center for Materials
Research and Education, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.

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