Papers by Richard M Leventhal
Prehistoric settlement patterns : essays in honor of Gordon R. Willey ; edited by Evon Z. Vogt. and Richard M. Leventhal
Heritage Preservation, Community Development and Sustainability: Tihosuco, Mexico and the Caste War of the Yucatan
The 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, 2015
6 Prehistoric Settlement at Copan by Gordon R. Willey
University of Texas Press eBooks, Dec 31, 1979
Theory and practice in Mediterranean archaeology : Old World and New World perspectives : an advanced seminar in honor of Lloyd Cotsen
Page 1. Theory and Practice in Mediterranean Archaeology: Old World and New World Perspectives An... more Page 1. Theory and Practice in Mediterranean Archaeology: Old World and New World Perspectives An Advanced Seminar in Honor of Lloyd Cotsen Edited by John K. Papadopoulos Richard M. Leventhal Cotsen Institute of ...
The Maya: Historic Archaeology and Archaeology of Historic Periods
Writing History
Theory and Practice in Mediterranean Archaeology, 2003
Heritage That Gives Back: Community Development and Heritage Preservation in Tihosuco, Mexico
6 Prehistoric Settlement at Copan by Gordon R. Willey
Maya Archaeology and Ethnohistory, 1979
Norman Hammond: Ancient Maya Civilization. Cambridge: University Press/New Brunswick NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1982. 338 pp., 125 illustrations. £22.50; $27.50 (hardback); £7.95; $12.95 (paperback)
Antiquity, 1983
Settlement Patterns, Iconography, and Colonial Rule: Mesoamerica
Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 1987

Theory and Practice in Mediterranean Archaeology, 2003
This book is dedicated to Lloyd Cotsen, a benefactor and friend to archaeologists around the worl... more This book is dedicated to Lloyd Cotsen, a benefactor and friend to archaeologists around the world. When Lloyd agreed to make a major contribution to the then UCLA Institute of Archaeology, he catapulted the Institute into the top ranks of archaeological research centers throughout the world. It will take time and much energy for the newly named Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA to achieve the goals it has set for itself. But it is clear that Lloyd has provided UCLA with a wonderful gift that will allow the Institute to build on the strengths it has already developed. Lloyd Cotsen's gift will fund much of the basic infrastructure of the Cotsen Institute. In addition, his largess will support a variety of new programs, including the development of annual or semi-annual Advanced Seminars. The latter were conceived of as a gathering of ten to fifteen leading scholars who would meet at UCLA to examine a critical issue or issues in the study of the past. This volume publishes the first Cotsen Advanced Seminar, held in Los Angeles from March 23 through 25, 2000. The seminar, originally cast as a workshop, was largely limited to the participants and moderators and began as a discussion among many members of the Cotsen Institute about what topic we might choose. We wanted to highlight, first of all, the enormous breadth and diversity of the UCLA archaeological community. The Cotsen Institute brings together archaeologists from many different departments-and disciplines-in the Humanities and Social Sciences (Anthropology, Art History, Classics, Germanic Languages, History, and Near Eastern Languages and Cultures), who work in various countries of the Americas, Africa, Asia, and Europe. We also wished to bring to the fore not only Lloyd's gift but his own diversity of interests. In the end, we decided to focus upon one geographic area-a region of almost constant study and (re)assessment over the course of centuries-the Mediterranean, and more particularly, the Aegean. This region ignited Lloyd's own interests in archaeology and in the past. We decided, however, to move away from a purely regional conference as we identified areas of study or broader themes and thus included responses from New World archaeologists. The goal was to focus discussion not only on issues related to the Mediterranean but also to the broader assessment of archaeological methods and theory throughout the world. The combination of both a regional-Old World-focus with responses and ideas from the New World created, we believe, a most exciting intellectual dialogue over the two days of the gathering. Lloyd Cotsen came to all of the sessions and gatherings, commented on the discussions, and produced voluminous notes from each session. We hope that this is a fitting volume to thank Lloyd for his generosity, together with his interest in the archaeological present and the distant past. It is also a fitting volume to initiate what we hope will be a long series of important publications based upon future Advanced Seminars of the Cotsen Institute.

This article presents the chronological framework used to reconstruct the political history of th... more This article presents the chronological framework used to reconstruct the political history of the ancient Lowland Maya site of Xunantunich in the upper Belize River valley. Extensive excavations from 1991 to 1997 by the Xunantunich Archaeological Project produced the ceramic, architectural, and epigraphic data needed to place the site within a temporal context. Refinement of the Barton Ramie ceramic chronology was the first step toward clarifying the Xunantunich chronology. Seriation of well-known Spanish Lookout types and modes from stratified deposits established a framework for understanding Late and Terminal Classic assemblages. Twenty-two radiocarbon samples place these ceramic complexes in absolute time. Obsidian hydration and masonry techniques were found to be less reliable chronological markers. The results indicate that Xunantunich emerged as a regional center during the Samal ( a.d. 600–670) and Hats’ Chaak ( a.d. 670–780) phases of the Late Classic period. Arguably, thi...
DePaul Journal of Art, Technology & Intellectual Property Law, 2016
2. WATSON & TODESCHINI, supra note 1, at 77. 3. Id. at 224 (on deposition of a curator concluding... more 2. WATSON & TODESCHINI, supra note 1, at 77. 3. Id. at 224 (on deposition of a curator concluding some orphans derived from recent breaks and observation of a conservator regarding fresh tool marks on orphans). 4. Id. at 227. 5. James A.R. Nafziger, Seizure and Forfeiture of Cultural Property by the United States 5 VILL. SPORTS & ENT. L.J. 19, 19 (1998) (on the ease with which cultural property is smuggled into the United States). See also Christina Luke,
Abstrak. Tuntutan global menuntut dunia pendidikan di Indonesia agar menyesuaikan perkembangan te... more Abstrak. Tuntutan global menuntut dunia pendidikan di Indonesia agar menyesuaikan perkembangan teknologi dalam peningkatan mutu pendidikan. Penelitian dilakukan untuk mendeskripsikan penerapan ulangan harian matematika menggunakan PHT (Penilaian Harian Terstruktur) berbasis android. Dalam penelitian ini metode yang digunakan yaitu deskriptif kualitatif dan deskriptif kuantitatif dengan jumlah sampel 23 siswa. Teknik pengambilan data yang digunakan adalah dengan observasi lingkungan sekolah, wawancara narasumber dengan guru dan teknisi, serta angket responden siswa terhadap PHT berbasis android. Simpulan dari penelitian ini adalah penerapan PHT berbasis android dari perspektif guru dan teknisi sudah cukup baik namun, dari prespektif siswa masih kurang diminati.
Museums and the destruction of heritage
International Journal of Nautical Archaeology, 2014
American Journal of Archaeology, 2011
foundations, centers, and departments at the University of Pennsylvania and Brock University. edi... more foundations, centers, and departments at the University of Pennsylvania and Brock University. editorial suggestions from the AJA and its anonymous reviewer greatly improved this note, as did advice from ole Varmer (acting in personal capacity). the authors are responsible for the views expressed here. 1 UneSCo 2001. 2 http://www.international.icomos.org/under_e.htm. 3 United nations 1982 (see Article 76 for a definition of the Continental Shelf, which may extend beyond the 200 nautical mile limit).
Toward Best Practice in Mediterranean Underwater Archaeology
International Journal of Nautical Archaeology, 2010
SIGGRAPH Comput. Graph., 1992
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Papers by Richard M Leventhal