As archaeobotanists we query the archaeological plant record to understand ancient wild plant gathering, agriculture, and foodways: the quintessential components of human interactions with the plant world. When working with...
Marsh, Erik J., Maria C. Bruno, Sherilyn C. Fritz, Paul Baker, José M. Capriles, and Christine A. Hastorf. "IntCal, SHCal, or a Mixed Curve? Choosing a 14C Calibration Curve for Archaeological and Paleoenvironmental Records...
Moore, Katherine, Maria Bruno, José M. Capriles, and Christine Hastorf. Integrated Contextual Approaches to Understanding Past Activities Using Plant and Animal Remains from Kala Uyuni, Lake Titicaca, Bolivia. In "Integrating...
Bruno, Maria C. Macrorestos botánicos de la Loma Mendoza. In Loma Mendoza: las excavaciones del Instituto Arqueológico Alemán y de la Direccíon Nacional de Arqueología en los años 1999-2002, edited by Heiko Prumers,...
One of the major models for the rise of the Tiwanaku state has been trade between people and colonies outside of the Titicaca Basin. Another major model has been the increased intensity of rituals and feasting at the center to...
Maria Bruno is a professor of Anthropology and Archaeology at Dickinson College. , El capítulo presenta de manera novedosa datos sobre los usos diversos y secuencia cronológica de plantas silvestres y cultivadas y, sobre la...
Maria Bruno is a professor of Anthropology and Archaeology at Dickinson College. , The Lake Titicaca basin has long been recognised as an area of crop diversity in the Andes of South America (Beck and García 1991; Cardenas...
Bruno, Maria C., Nicole C. Couture, and Deborah E. Blom. Proyecto Qochamama?: Experiences, Perceptions, and Representations of Three Female Co-Directors at Tiwanaku, Bolivia. The SAA Archaeological Record 12, no. 2 (2012):...
One of the indigenous staple crops of Andean South America is the pseudocereal quinoa (Chenopodium quinoa Willd.). While it was traditionally placed in its own family Chenopodiaceae, recent genetic work located it within the...