--Publicaciones--
2015 (Cagnato, Clarissa, Gayle J. Fritz, and Shannon L. Dawdy) Strolling through Madame Mandeville’s Garden: The Real and Imagined Landscape of Eighteenth Century New Orleans, Louisiana. Journal of Ethnobiology 35(2): 235-261.
2013 Estudios de Plantas y Animales en La Corona (con Diana N. Fridberg). In XXVI Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueologicas en Guatemala, edited by Barbara Arroyo and Luis Mendez Salinas, pp. 1009-1017, Museo Nacional de Arqueologia y Etnologia, Guatemala.
2013 Estudios de Plantas y Animales en La Corona (con Diana N. Fridberg). In XXVI Simposio de Investigaciones Arqueologicas en Guatemala, edited by Barbara Arroyo and Luis Mendez Salinas, pp. 1009-1017, Museo Nacional de Arqueologia y Etnologia, Guatemala.
--Extractos publicados--
2012 Clarissa Cagnato and Diana N. Fridberg
Estudio de los Restos Botánicos y de Fauna en La Corona: Metodología y Primeros Resultados
Los antiguos habitantes de La Corona explotaron una diversidad de especies de plantas y animales en sus vidas cotidianas. La integración de estudios paleo-etnobotánicos y de fauna en las investigaciones de La Corona ha proporcionado datos importantes y útiles para la interpretación del sitio. En esta ponencia se presentan los análisis derestos macrobotánicos (semillas, madera, etc.) y microbotánicos (granos de almidón), así como el uso amplio de fauna local y también ajena al sitio.
(Link: http://es.scribd.com/doc/99020986/Programa-FINAL-2012)
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2012 Cagnato, Clarissa and Gayle J. Fritz
Strolling through Madame Mandeville’s Garden: The Real and Imagined Landscape of 18th
Century New Orleans
Paleoethnobotanical samples from 18th century French and Spanish colonial contexts at the Rising Sun Hotel site, New Orleans, were collected and analyzed to further understand the colonial garden landscape and to assess whether or not the plants cultivated there reflect creolization. Results indicate that while there was no dramatic change in plant composition over time, the garden as a constructed landscape was modified to suit the needs and values of the inhabitants. Moreover, the garden probably did not represent the city planners' ideal vision of what the constructed landscape should look like: one that replicated Versailles and other European gardens.
(Link: http://www.saa.org/Portals/0/SAA/Meetings/Abstracts/Abstracts_final.pdf)
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2007 Cagnato, Clarissa, Patrick Dresch, Pamela L. Geller, and Cassandra R. Bill
El Guayabal and Las Orquídeas: The El Paraíso Valley as a Regional Center in the Preclassic
Investigations at El Guayabal and Las Orquídeas in the El Paraíso valley confirm the time depth and extent of the valley’s settlement. Ceramic analysis indicates both sites were strongly tied to the ceramic traditions of the region and confirms valley occupation dating to as early as the Middle Preclassic. It appears that the Preclassic period was dominated by El Guayabal—a site that includes the largest earthen structure in the Copan region. However, Late Preclassic settlement in the valley was also characterized by smaller sites, like Las Orquídeas, similar to sites located throughout the southeastern Maya area.
(Link: http://www.saa.org/Portals/0/SAA/Meetings/Abstracts/Abstracts2007.pdf)
Estudio de los Restos Botánicos y de Fauna en La Corona: Metodología y Primeros Resultados
Los antiguos habitantes de La Corona explotaron una diversidad de especies de plantas y animales en sus vidas cotidianas. La integración de estudios paleo-etnobotánicos y de fauna en las investigaciones de La Corona ha proporcionado datos importantes y útiles para la interpretación del sitio. En esta ponencia se presentan los análisis derestos macrobotánicos (semillas, madera, etc.) y microbotánicos (granos de almidón), así como el uso amplio de fauna local y también ajena al sitio.
(Link: http://es.scribd.com/doc/99020986/Programa-FINAL-2012)
_______________________________
2012 Cagnato, Clarissa and Gayle J. Fritz
Strolling through Madame Mandeville’s Garden: The Real and Imagined Landscape of 18th
Century New Orleans
Paleoethnobotanical samples from 18th century French and Spanish colonial contexts at the Rising Sun Hotel site, New Orleans, were collected and analyzed to further understand the colonial garden landscape and to assess whether or not the plants cultivated there reflect creolization. Results indicate that while there was no dramatic change in plant composition over time, the garden as a constructed landscape was modified to suit the needs and values of the inhabitants. Moreover, the garden probably did not represent the city planners' ideal vision of what the constructed landscape should look like: one that replicated Versailles and other European gardens.
(Link: http://www.saa.org/Portals/0/SAA/Meetings/Abstracts/Abstracts_final.pdf)
__________________________________
2007 Cagnato, Clarissa, Patrick Dresch, Pamela L. Geller, and Cassandra R. Bill
El Guayabal and Las Orquídeas: The El Paraíso Valley as a Regional Center in the Preclassic
Investigations at El Guayabal and Las Orquídeas in the El Paraíso valley confirm the time depth and extent of the valley’s settlement. Ceramic analysis indicates both sites were strongly tied to the ceramic traditions of the region and confirms valley occupation dating to as early as the Middle Preclassic. It appears that the Preclassic period was dominated by El Guayabal—a site that includes the largest earthen structure in the Copan region. However, Late Preclassic settlement in the valley was also characterized by smaller sites, like Las Orquídeas, similar to sites located throughout the southeastern Maya area.
(Link: http://www.saa.org/Portals/0/SAA/Meetings/Abstracts/Abstracts2007.pdf)