Arizona State University College of Liberal Arts and Sciences

Dr. Michael E. Smith . . . Publications to Download


Publishing Archaeology Blog . . .. . . . Calixtlahuacca Archaeological Project Blog

I am an archaeologist specializing in the Aztecs of central Mexico. My professional title is Professor of Anthropology in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change (formerly known as the Department of Anthropology) at Arizona State University. I have directed fieldwork projects at Aztec sites in the Mexican state of Morelos and in the Toluca Valley, and I have published several books and numerous scholarly articles on this work.

My research focuses on Aztec social and economic organization, and on the comparative analysis of ancient urban societies. My theoretical and comparative interests derive from a materialist, political-economy approach to ancient state societies. I have published on topics of urbanism, imperialism, households, and economic organization. Current projects include assembly of the final publications on my Morelos excavations, fieldwork at Calixtlahuaca, and work on comparative urbanism.

What's New:
I am uploading pdfs of my papers to the Selected Works site. There are not as many posted yet in comparison to my own dowloads page, but they are nicely organized by theme and it looks much nicer than my own messy pages.
Aztec Crystal Skulls!!
See my blog entry on these.
Not all of these are fakes (although this one is).
The Anthropology Newsletter botched my statement
on comparative archaeology. The Newsletter turned this joint statement signed by 12 archaeologists into a "letter to the editor" with only my name (thus defeating much of the purpose of the document). You can see the original statement here.
See a list of books by Michael Smith that I did not write.

Grad study in archaeology at ASU. The SHESC web site is being rennovated, and in the meantime there is information on the graduate program here. For a downloadable pdf flier on the grad program Click Here.

I have two blogs: Calixtlahuaca Archaeological Project ; and: Publishing Archaeology Blog
The Calixtlahuaca Project has an incipient Calixtlahuaca Web Site

Biographical and Professional Information:

List of publications & downloads
Biographical Information 
Curriculum Vitae
Student bibliography on the Aztecs
Book series: Ancient Cities of the New World
Ancient Urbanism Page

Something Very Silly

Do you want information about an artifact that you own?
Click here.
Some non-technical papers :

Research Material, Toluca Valley:
Calixtlahuaca Web Page (new, rudimentary)
Matlatzinco Home Page (Postclassic Toluca Valley)
Report on Preliminary Research at Calixtlahuaca
Photos of Classic Period ceramics from Calixtlahuaca
The Roman figurine from Calixtlahuaca, Mexico
Brief description of fieldwork plans

Research Material, Morelos:
Redware Sherds Analyzed by NAA
Tlahuica Culture Home Page (Postclassic Morelos)
La Cultura Tlahuica de Morelos (lo mismo, en español)
Excavations at the Aztec City of Yautepec
Aztec Rural Sites, Cuexcomate and Capilco
"La Cerámica Postclásica de Morelos" (paper with illustrations)

Some recent puplications:
"Form & Meaning in the Earliest Cities"
"How do Archaeologists Compare Ancient States?"
"City Size in Late Postclassic Mesoamerica"
"Did the Maya Build Architectural Cosmograms?"
"The Archaeology of Ancient State Economies"
"Tula & Chichen Itza: Are We Asking the Right Questions?"

ASU Links:

Grad study in archaeology at ASU.

 

Civilizations of Antiquity

Books: (click on the covers for more information)


List of publications & downloads
Links:  ASU: School of Human Evolution and Social Change  ||

Django Reinhardt video
Talking cat
New Dutch cell phone
Bronze Age orientation day

Email:  mesmith9@asu.edu.  ASU
  School of Human Evolution and Social Change / P.O. Box 872402 / Arizona State University / Tempe, AZ  85287
tel: 480-727-9520 || fax: 480-965-7671

Creative Commons License This website is licensed under a Creative Commons License. Bird
© 2008, Michael E. Smith (revised 8/23/2008) .        "It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing."