University Of New Mexico Press imprint: 489 books

by Daniel Shaw
Language: English
Release Date: December 16, 2010

In this much-needed work for our nation's youth, Daniel Shaw tracks the interconnections of small regional ecosystems to larger ones, and in the process demonstrates the accessibility of nature to everyone. As Shaw notes in his introduction, the story that is too often told about the environment is...
by Deborah L. Duvall
Language: English
Release Date: October 17, 2012

"A long time ago, all the animals and people lived happily together," begins this story of the origins of Cherokee herbal medicine. As the people begin to outnumber the animals and then to hunt them for their hides and meat, the days of peaceful coexistence are over. The animals take their revenge...

Children of Time

Evolution and the Human Story

by Anne H. Weaver
Language: English
Release Date: April 15, 2012

Ancient relics--stone tools, bones, footprints, and even DNA--offer many clues about our human ancestors and how they lived. At the same time, our kinship with our human ancestors lies as much in their sense of humor, their interactions with others, their curiosity and their moments of wonder, as...

The Case of the Indian Trader

Billy Malone and the National Park Service Investigation at Hubbell Trading Post

by Paul Berkowitz
Language: English
Release Date: May 15, 2011

This is the story of Billy Gene Malone and the end of an era. Malone lived almost his entire life on the Navajo Reservation working as an Indian trader; the last real Indian trader to operate historic Hubbell Trading Post. In 2004, the National Park Service (NPS) launched an investigation targeting...

Easter Island's Silent Sentinels

The Sculpture and Architecture of Rapa Nui

by Kenneth Treister, Patricia Vargas Casanova, Claudio Cristino
Language: English
Release Date: November 15, 2013

It may be the most interesting and yet loneliest spot on earth: a volcanic rock surrounded by a million square miles of ocean, named for the day Dutch explorers discovered it, Easter Sunday, April 5, 1722. Here people created a complex society, sophisticated astronomy, exquisite wood sculpture, monumental...

Railroad Empire across the Heartland

Rephotographing Alexander Gardner's Westward Journey

by James E. Sherow
Language: English
Release Date: October 15, 2014

Best known for his Civil War photographs, Alexander Gardner also documented the construction of the Union Pacific Railway, Eastern Division (later the Kansas Pacific Railroad), across Kansas beginning in 1867. This book presents recent photographs by John R. Charlton of the scenes Gardner recorded,...
by
Language: English
Release Date: November 16, 2010

Until the early twentieth century, printed invitations to executions issued by lawmen were a vital part of the ritual of death concluding a criminal proceeding in the United States. In this study, Gordon Morris Bakken invites readers to an understanding of the death penalty in America with a collection...
by Héctor Lindo-Fuentes, Erik Ching
Language: English
Release Date: April 16, 2012

In the 1960s and 1970s, El Salvador's reigning military regime instituted a series of reforms that sought to modernize the country and undermine ideological radicalism, the most ambitious of which was an education initiative. It was multifaceted, but its most controversial component was the use of...
by Hillary S. Webb
Language: English
Release Date: March 15, 2012

Yanantin and Masintin in the Andean World is an eloquently written autoethnography in which researcher Hillary S. Webb seeks to understand the indigenous Andean concept of yanantin or “complementary opposites.” One of the most well-known and defining characteristics of indigenous Andean thought,...
by Matthew Bokovoy
Language: English
Release Date: November 1, 2005

In the American Southwest, no two events shaped modern Spanish heritage more profoundly than the San Diego Expositions of 1915-16 and 1935-36. Both San Diego fairs displayed a portrait of the Southwest and its peoples for the American public. The Panama-California Exposition of 1915-16 celebrated...

The Chouteaus

First Family of the Fur Trade

by Stan Hoig
Language: English
Release Date: June 8, 2010

In the late eighteenth century, the vast, pristine land that lay west of the Mississippi River remained largely unknown to the outside world. The area beckoned to daring frontiersmen who produced the first major industry of the American West--the colorful but challenging, often dangerous fur trade....

Close to Home

Photographs

by Richard S. Buswell
Language: English
Release Date: May 1, 2013

For over four decades, Richard Buswell has trained his camera on the landscape of Montana, with its abandoned and overgrown homesteads and majestic, never-ending skies. In the recent work assembled in this volume, Buswell’s fourth book, his subjects are much more than scattered remains. His black-and-white...

From the Barrio to Washington

An Educator's Journey

by Keith Taylor, Armando Rodriguez
Language: English
Release Date: December 31, 2007

What would be the odds of a poor Mexican boy who migrated with his family to southern California in the 1920s rising through the ranks of the American education system to become the first Hispanic principal of a junior and senior high school in San Diego, the second Hispanic to be a college president...
by Gordon Morris Bakken
Language: English
Release Date: September 16, 2011

History has left us a classic image of western mining in the grizzly forty-niner squatting by a clear stream sifting through gravel to reveal gold. What this slice of Western Americana does not reveal, however, is thousands of miners doing the same, their gravel washing downstream, causing the water...
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