fbpx
Wikipedia

Bruce Trigger

Bruce Graham Trigger OC OQ FRSC (June 18, 1937 – December 1, 2006) was a Canadian archaeologist, anthropologist, and ethnohistorian. He was appointed the James McGill Professor at McGill University in 2001.[3]

Bruce G. Trigger
Born(1937-06-18)June 18, 1937
DiedDecember 1, 2006(2006-12-01) (aged 69)[2]
NationalityCanadian
Occupation(s)archaeologist and ethnohistorian
SpouseBarbara Welch [2]
ChildrenIsabel Trigger and Rosalyn Trigger
AwardsInnis-Gérin Medal, Cornplanter Medal, Officer of the National Order of Quebec, Officer of the Order of Canada
Academic background
EducationSt. Mary’s Collegiate Institute
Stratford Collegiate Institute
Alma materUniversity of Toronto (B.A., 1959) Yale University (Ph.D., 1964)
ThesisHistory and Settlement of Lower Nubia[1] (1964)
Doctoral advisorWilliam Kelly Simpson and Michael D. Coe
Academic work
DisciplineArchaeology
Anthropology
Ethnohistory
InstitutionsNorthwestern University
McGill University

Life edit

Born in Preston, Ontario (now part of Cambridge), Trigger obtained his undergraduate education at the University of Toronto earning a B.A. in anthropology in 1959.[3] Trigger received a doctorate in archaeology from Yale University in 1964.[3] He was taught by George Peter Murdock and Benjamin Irving Rouse.[4] He was co-supervised by William Kelly Simpson and Michael D. Coe.[5] He became friends with K. C. Chang, a Chinese archaeologist, who joined the department during his final year of his PhD.[4] His doctoral work was funded by a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship Award.[6] His PhD thesis, entitled "History and Settlement of Lower Nubia," argued that four principle parameters determined the density of Nubia over 4,000 years: the height of floods, agricultural techniques, foreign trade and wars.[1] He spent the following year teaching at Northwestern University[3] and subsequently took a position as assistant professor,[3] with the Department of Anthropology at McGill University in Montreal, and remained there for the rest of his career.[3] He was married to Dr Barbara Welch,[7] a British geographer trained in Physical Geography, who, despite being less-known than her husband, was considered an equally sophisticated thinker.[2]

Pamela Jane Smith writes in her obituary of Bruce Trigger that "It is little known outside Canada that Bruce had a deep and profound influence on the development of archaeology in his homeland and is seen as one of the great Canadian intellectuals along with Harold Innis, Northrop Frye and Marshall McLuhan."[2]

Contributions edit

Bruce Trigger contributed to a wide range of fields and wrote on many aspects of archaeology. He published over 20 books including the book "A History of Archaeological Thought" which became required reading in the discipline.[8] Leo Klejn (2008:4, (Lev Samuilovich Klejn, known as Leo Klejn, who was an internationally acclaimed Russian archaeologist) who corresponded with him for a considerable period of time wrote of him "Since then I always felt (and said) that if there were another archaeologist in the world whose positions were the most similar to mine, it would be Bruce Trigger."[9] He described (2008:4) Bruce and his contributions after his death as: "Today no other scholar is able to skillfully embrace the whole multifaceted range of activities of this modest and calm man. There must have been something unique about his spirit or personality that inspired and equipped him to deal creatively with American Indians, Ancient Egypt, world civilizations and the theory and history of archaeology, and it is interesting to try to understand some of the principles underlying his explorations of these very different themes."[9]

Archaeological fieldwork edit

During his doctoral degree at Yale he was also the Chief Archaeologist for the 1962 Yale/Pennsylvania excavations at Armina West in Egyptian Nubia. These excavations were directed by William Kelly Simpson. Bruce was also the Staff Archaeologist with the 1963-1964 Oriental Institute Sudan Expedition for the UNESCO campaign.[10]

Ethnohistory edit

He was arguably best known for The Children of Aataentsic, his two-volume study of the Huron peoples, a work which remains the definitive study on the history and ethnography of that people. The Children of Aataentsic earned Trigger numerous accolades, including adoption by the Huron-Wendat Nation as an honorary member. Trigger would later reiterate some of the key arguments of the book in Natives and Newcomers, a polemical work aimed at educating laypeople. In Natives and Newcomers Trigger, writing in the tradition of Franz Boas, argued that the colonial and Aboriginal societies of early Canada all possessed rich and complex social and cultural systems, and that there are no grounds to argue that any society of early Canada was superior to the others.

History of archaeology edit

Trigger's book A History of Archaeological Thought investigates the history of the development of theory and archaeology as a discipline. The first version was published by Cambridge University Press in 1989.[11] This book was described as "the first ever to examine the history of archaeological thought from medieval times to the present in world-wide perspective"[12] A second and expanded edition of this book was published in 2006.[12] The second book "introduces new archaeological perspectives and concerns. At once stimulating and even-handed, it places the development of archaeological thought and theory throughout within a broad social and intellectual framework."[12]

He published a number of articles on this topic:

  • Trigger, Bruce Graham 1981 Anglo‐American Archaeology World Archaeology 13(2: Regional traditions of archaeological research 1): 138–155.
  • Trigger, Bruce Graham 1983 American Archaeology as Native History: A Review Essay. The William and Mary Quarterly 40(3): 413–452.
  • Trigger, Bruce Graham 1984 Archaeology at the Crossroads: What's New? Annual Review of Anthropology 13: 275–300.
  • Trigger, Bruce Graham 1984 Alternative Archaeologies: Nationalist, Colonialist, Imperialist. Man New Series, 19(2): 355–370.
  • Trigger, Bruce Graham 1986 Prospects for a World Archaeology. World Archaeology 18(1) Perspectives in World Archaeology: 1–20.
  • Trigger, Bruce Graham 1994 Ethnicity: An Appropriate Concept for Archaeology. Fennoscandia Archaeologica XI: 100–103.
  • Trigger, Bruce Graham 1995 Expanding Middle Range Theory. Antiquity 69: 449–458.
  • Trigger, Bruce Graham 1998 ‘The Loss of Innocence’ in Historical Perspective. Antiquity 72(277): 694–698.

Archaeological theory edit

In Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study Trigger uses an integrated theoretical approach to look at the meaning of similarities and differences in the formation of complex societies in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, Shang of China, Aztecs and Classic Maya of Mesoamerica, Inka of the Andes, and Yoruba of Africa. In 2004 a session at the Society for American Archaeology (SAA) conference was dedicated to the research of Bruce Trigger.

Trigger also made significant contributions to theory and debates on epistemological issues within archaeology. The 2003 book "Artifacts and Ideas" is a collection of previously published papers that trace the history and development of these contributions.

In particular were his arguments about how the social and political contexts of research affect archaeological interpretation. One essay entitled "Archaeology and the Image of the American Indian" documents how archaeological interpretation reflected and legitimated stereotypes of Native American peoples and expressed the dominant political ideas and interests of Euro-American culture. For example, prior to 1914 Euro-American stereotypes resulted in a prehistory that saw native cultures as being primitive and inherently static. It was commonly believed that Native Americans had not undergone any significant developmental changes and that they were incapable of change. It was believed that natives had arrived in the Americas only recently, and this "fact" explained their alleged lack of cultural development. Some early Euro-American archaeologists explained away the contrary evidence of earthwork mounds as the creations of "more enlightened" non-native peoples who had been exterminated by Native American savages. These popular beliefs, supported by the claims of early archaeologists, served to legitimate the displacement of native peoples from their homelands. John Wesley Powell, who led the debunking of the mound builder myths, not coincidentally also recognized that great injustices had been perpetuated against Native American peoples. Although Trigger recognized that Euro-American political interests tended to influence and distort interpretations of the archaeological record, he also argued that the accumulation of evidence served to correct these distortions.

Honours and awards edit

He received a number of academic awards and numerous other honours such as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada from 1976, he became a recipient of their Innis-Gérin Medal in 1985.[3] In 1979 he was awarded the Cornplanter Medal.[13] In 1991, he was recipient of the Québec Government's Prix Léon-Gérin. The Québec Government in 2001 made him an Officer of the National Order of Quebec while five years later, in 2005, he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada.

His most cherished honour was his adoption in 1989 into the Great Turtle Clan of the Wendat (Huron) Confederacy, with the name Nyemea.[14]

Trigger died of cancer on December 1, 2006. His archive is kept at the McGill University Archives.[15]

Selected bibliography edit

  • History and Settlement in Lower Nubia. New Haven: Yale University Publications in Anthropology, 1965.
  • The Late Nubian Settlement at Arminna West. New Haven: Publications of the Pennsylvania-Yale Expedition to Egypt, 1965.
  • Beyond History: The Methods of Prehistory. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1968.
  • The Huron: Farmers of the North. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1969, revised edition, 1990.
  • The Impact of Europeans on Huronia. Toronto: The Copp Clark Publishing Company, 1969.
  • The Meroitic Funerary Inscriptions from Arminna West. New Haven: Publications of the Pennsylvania-Yale Expedition to Egypt, 1970.
  • (with J.F. Pendergast) Cartier's Hochelaga and the Dawson Site. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1972.
  • The Children of Aataentsic: A History of the Huron People to 1660. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1976.
  • Nubia Under the Pharaohs. London: Thames and Hudson, 1976.
  • Time and Traditions: Essays in Archaeological Interpretation. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1978 (U.S. edition New York: Columbia University Press).
  • Handbook of North American Indians, Vol. 15. Northeast, Washington: Smithsonian Institution, 1978.
  • Time and Traditions: Essays in Archaeological Interpretation. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1978.
  • Gordon Childe: Revolutions in Archaeology. London: Thames and Hudson, 1980.
  • (with B.J. Kemp, D. O'Connor, and A.B. Lloyd) Ancient Egypt: A Social History. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983.
  • Natives and Newcomers: Canada's "Heroic Age" Revisited. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1985.
  • A History of Archaeological Thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989.
  • Early Civilizations: Ancient Egypt in Context. New York: Columbia, 1993.
  • The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas [vol. I]. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
  • Sociocultural Evolution: Calculation and Contingency. Oxford: Blackwell, 1998.
  • Artifacts and Ideas: Essays in Archaeology. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction Publishers, 2003.
  • Understanding Early Civilizations: A Comparative Study. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2003.
  • A History of Archaeological Thought. 2nd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Klejn, Leo S. (2008). "Bruce Trigger in World Archaeology". Bulletin of the History of Archaeology. 18 (2): 7. doi:10.5334/bha.18202.
  2. ^ a b c d Smith, Pamela Jane (2007). "Necrology: A reflection on Bruce and Barbara Trigger based on oral-historical interviews and personal correspondence". Bulletin of the History of Archaeology. 17 (1): 52. doi:10.5334/bha.17116.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Patterson, Thomas (2014). "Trigger, Bruce Graham". In Smith, C. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology. New York: Springer Verlag. p. 75. doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-0465-2_1298. ISBN 978-1-4419-0465-2.
  4. ^ a b Klejn, Leo (2008). "Bruce Trigger in World Archaeology". Bulletin of the History of Archaeology. 18 (2): 6. doi:10.5334/bha.18202.
  5. ^ Phillips, Jackie S. (2007). "Bruce Graham Trigger (1937-2006)" (PDF). Mitteilungen der Sudanarchäologischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin e.V. Heft 18: 219.
  6. ^ Phillips, Jackie S. (2007). "Bruce Graham Trigger (1937-2006)" (PDF). Mitteilungen der Sudanarchäologischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin e.V. Heft 18: 219.
  7. ^ Smith, Pamela Jane (2007). "Necrology: A reflection on Bruce and Barbara Trigger based on oral-historical interviews and personal correspondence". Bulletin of the History of Archaeology. 17 (1): 53. doi:10.5334/bha.17116.
  8. ^ "Bruce Trigger, 1937-2006 News". McGill University. Newsroom Institutional Communications, McGill University. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  9. ^ a b Klejn, Leo (2008). "Bruce Trigger in World Archaeology". Bulletin of the History of Archaeology. 18 (2): 4. doi:10.5334/bha.18202.
  10. ^ Phillips, Jackie S. (2007). "Bruce Graham Trigger (1937-2006)" (PDF). Mitteilungen der Sudanarchäologischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin e.V. Heft 18: 219.
  11. ^ Trigger, Bruce G. (1989). History of Archaeological Thought. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521338189. Retrieved 24 April 2020.
  12. ^ a b c Trigger, Bruce G. (2006). A History of Archaeological Thought. Cambridge University Press Books. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511813016. ISBN 9780521840767. Retrieved 24 April 2020. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  13. ^ Fenton, William N. (April 1980). "Frederick Starr, Jesse Cornplanter and the Cornplanter Medal for Iroquois Research". New York History. 26 (2). New York State Historical Association: 186–199. JSTOR 23169465.
  14. ^ Phillips, Jackie S. (2007). "Bruce Graham Trigger (1937-2006)". Mitteilungen der Sudanarchäologischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin e.V. Heft 18: 220.
  15. ^ "Bruce Trigger Fonds". McGill Library Archival Catalogue. Retrieved 2018-02-01.
  • Trigger, Bruce G.
2003 Artifacts and Ideas, Essays in Archaeology. Transaction Publishers, New Brunswick, NJ.
  • Trigger, Bruce G.
2003 (1980) Archaeology and the Image of the American Indian. In Artifacts and Ideas. Originally published in American Antiquity 45:662-676.
  • Williamson, Ronald F. and Michael S. Bisson (eds)
2006 The Archaeology of Bruce Trigger: Theoretical Empiricism. McGill-Queens's University Press, Montréal.

External links edit

bruce, trigger, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, january, 2016, learn, when, remove, this, message, bruce, grah. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations January 2016 Learn how and when to remove this message Bruce Graham Trigger OC OQ FRSC June 18 1937 December 1 2006 was a Canadian archaeologist anthropologist and ethnohistorian He was appointed the James McGill Professor at McGill University in 2001 3 Bruce G TriggerOC OQ FRSCBorn 1937 06 18 June 18 1937Preston Ontario CanadaDiedDecember 1 2006 2006 12 01 aged 69 2 NationalityCanadianOccupation s archaeologist and ethnohistorianSpouseBarbara Welch 2 ChildrenIsabel Trigger and Rosalyn TriggerAwardsInnis Gerin Medal Cornplanter Medal Officer of the National Order of Quebec Officer of the Order of CanadaAcademic backgroundEducationSt Mary s Collegiate InstituteStratford Collegiate InstituteAlma materUniversity of Toronto B A 1959 Yale University Ph D 1964 ThesisHistory and Settlement of Lower Nubia 1 1964 Doctoral advisorWilliam Kelly Simpson and Michael D CoeAcademic workDisciplineArchaeology Anthropology EthnohistoryInstitutionsNorthwestern University McGill University Contents 1 Life 2 Contributions 2 1 Archaeological fieldwork 2 2 Ethnohistory 2 3 History of archaeology 2 4 Archaeological theory 3 Honours and awards 4 Selected bibliography 5 References 6 External linksLife editBorn in Preston Ontario now part of Cambridge Trigger obtained his undergraduate education at the University of Toronto earning a B A in anthropology in 1959 3 Trigger received a doctorate in archaeology from Yale University in 1964 3 He was taught by George Peter Murdock and Benjamin Irving Rouse 4 He was co supervised by William Kelly Simpson and Michael D Coe 5 He became friends with K C Chang a Chinese archaeologist who joined the department during his final year of his PhD 4 His doctoral work was funded by a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship Award 6 His PhD thesis entitled History and Settlement of Lower Nubia argued that four principle parameters determined the density of Nubia over 4 000 years the height of floods agricultural techniques foreign trade and wars 1 He spent the following year teaching at Northwestern University 3 and subsequently took a position as assistant professor 3 with the Department of Anthropology at McGill University in Montreal and remained there for the rest of his career 3 He was married to Dr Barbara Welch 7 a British geographer trained in Physical Geography who despite being less known than her husband was considered an equally sophisticated thinker 2 Pamela Jane Smith writes in her obituary of Bruce Trigger that It is little known outside Canada that Bruce had a deep and profound influence on the development of archaeology in his homeland and is seen as one of the great Canadian intellectuals along with Harold Innis Northrop Frye and Marshall McLuhan 2 Contributions editBruce Trigger contributed to a wide range of fields and wrote on many aspects of archaeology He published over 20 books including the book A History of Archaeological Thought which became required reading in the discipline 8 Leo Klejn 2008 4 Lev Samuilovich Klejn known as Leo Klejn who was an internationally acclaimed Russian archaeologist who corresponded with him for a considerable period of time wrote of him Since then I always felt and said that if there were another archaeologist in the world whose positions were the most similar to mine it would be Bruce Trigger 9 He described 2008 4 Bruce and his contributions after his death as Today no other scholar is able to skillfully embrace the whole multifaceted range of activities of this modest and calm man There must have been something unique about his spirit or personality that inspired and equipped him to deal creatively with American Indians Ancient Egypt world civilizations and the theory and history of archaeology and it is interesting to try to understand some of the principles underlying his explorations of these very different themes 9 Archaeological fieldwork edit During his doctoral degree at Yale he was also the Chief Archaeologist for the 1962 Yale Pennsylvania excavations at Armina West in Egyptian Nubia These excavations were directed by William Kelly Simpson Bruce was also the Staff Archaeologist with the 1963 1964 Oriental Institute Sudan Expedition for the UNESCO campaign 10 Ethnohistory edit He was arguably best known for The Children of Aataentsic his two volume study of the Huron peoples a work which remains the definitive study on the history and ethnography of that people The Children of Aataentsic earned Trigger numerous accolades including adoption by the Huron Wendat Nation as an honorary member Trigger would later reiterate some of the key arguments of the book in Natives and Newcomers a polemical work aimed at educating laypeople In Natives and Newcomers Trigger writing in the tradition of Franz Boas argued that the colonial and Aboriginal societies of early Canada all possessed rich and complex social and cultural systems and that there are no grounds to argue that any society of early Canada was superior to the others History of archaeology edit Trigger s book A History of Archaeological Thought investigates the history of the development of theory and archaeology as a discipline The first version was published by Cambridge University Press in 1989 11 This book was described as the first ever to examine the history of archaeological thought from medieval times to the present in world wide perspective 12 A second and expanded edition of this book was published in 2006 12 The second book introduces new archaeological perspectives and concerns At once stimulating and even handed it places the development of archaeological thought and theory throughout within a broad social and intellectual framework 12 He published a number of articles on this topic Trigger Bruce Graham 1981 Anglo American Archaeology World Archaeology 13 2 Regional traditions of archaeological research 1 138 155 Trigger Bruce Graham 1983 American Archaeology as Native History A Review Essay The William and Mary Quarterly 40 3 413 452 Trigger Bruce Graham 1984 Archaeology at the Crossroads What s New Annual Review of Anthropology 13 275 300 Trigger Bruce Graham 1984 Alternative Archaeologies Nationalist Colonialist Imperialist Man New Series 19 2 355 370 Trigger Bruce Graham 1986 Prospects for a World Archaeology World Archaeology 18 1 Perspectives in World Archaeology 1 20 Trigger Bruce Graham 1994 Ethnicity An Appropriate Concept for Archaeology Fennoscandia Archaeologica XI 100 103 Trigger Bruce Graham 1995 Expanding Middle Range Theory Antiquity 69 449 458 Trigger Bruce Graham 1998 The Loss of Innocence in Historical Perspective Antiquity 72 277 694 698 Archaeological theory edit In Understanding Early Civilizations A Comparative Study Trigger uses an integrated theoretical approach to look at the meaning of similarities and differences in the formation of complex societies in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia Shang of China Aztecs and Classic Maya of Mesoamerica Inka of the Andes and Yoruba of Africa In 2004 a session at the Society for American Archaeology SAA conference was dedicated to the research of Bruce Trigger Trigger also made significant contributions to theory and debates on epistemological issues within archaeology The 2003 book Artifacts and Ideas is a collection of previously published papers that trace the history and development of these contributions In particular were his arguments about how the social and political contexts of research affect archaeological interpretation One essay entitled Archaeology and the Image of the American Indian documents how archaeological interpretation reflected and legitimated stereotypes of Native American peoples and expressed the dominant political ideas and interests of Euro American culture For example prior to 1914 Euro American stereotypes resulted in a prehistory that saw native cultures as being primitive and inherently static It was commonly believed that Native Americans had not undergone any significant developmental changes and that they were incapable of change It was believed that natives had arrived in the Americas only recently and this fact explained their alleged lack of cultural development Some early Euro American archaeologists explained away the contrary evidence of earthwork mounds as the creations of more enlightened non native peoples who had been exterminated by Native American savages These popular beliefs supported by the claims of early archaeologists served to legitimate the displacement of native peoples from their homelands John Wesley Powell who led the debunking of the mound builder myths not coincidentally also recognized that great injustices had been perpetuated against Native American peoples Although Trigger recognized that Euro American political interests tended to influence and distort interpretations of the archaeological record he also argued that the accumulation of evidence served to correct these distortions Honours and awards editHe received a number of academic awards and numerous other honours such as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada from 1976 he became a recipient of their Innis Gerin Medal in 1985 3 In 1979 he was awarded the Cornplanter Medal 13 In 1991 he was recipient of the Quebec Government s Prix Leon Gerin The Quebec Government in 2001 made him an Officer of the National Order of Quebec while five years later in 2005 he was made an Officer of the Order of Canada His most cherished honour was his adoption in 1989 into the Great Turtle Clan of the Wendat Huron Confederacy with the name Nyemea 14 Trigger died of cancer on December 1 2006 His archive is kept at the McGill University Archives 15 Selected bibliography editHistory and Settlement in Lower Nubia New Haven Yale University Publications in Anthropology 1965 The Late Nubian Settlement at Arminna West New Haven Publications of the Pennsylvania Yale Expedition to Egypt 1965 Beyond History The Methods of Prehistory New York Holt Rinehart and Winston 1968 The Huron Farmers of the North New York Holt Rinehart and Winston 1969 revised edition 1990 The Impact of Europeans on Huronia Toronto The Copp Clark Publishing Company 1969 The Meroitic Funerary Inscriptions from Arminna West New Haven Publications of the Pennsylvania Yale Expedition to Egypt 1970 with J F Pendergast Cartier s Hochelaga and the Dawson Site Montreal McGill Queen s University Press 1972 The Children of Aataentsic A History of the Huron People to 1660 Montreal McGill Queen s University Press 1976 Nubia Under the Pharaohs London Thames and Hudson 1976 Time and Traditions Essays in Archaeological Interpretation Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 1978 U S edition New York Columbia University Press Handbook of North American Indians Vol 15 Northeast Washington Smithsonian Institution 1978 Time and Traditions Essays in Archaeological Interpretation Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 1978 Gordon Childe Revolutions in Archaeology London Thames and Hudson 1980 with B J Kemp D O Connor and A B Lloyd Ancient Egypt A Social History Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1983 Natives and Newcomers Canada s Heroic Age Revisited Montreal McGill Queen s University Press 1985 A History of Archaeological Thought Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1989 Early Civilizations Ancient Egypt in Context New York Columbia 1993 The Cambridge History of the Native Peoples of the Americas vol I New York Cambridge University Press 1996 Sociocultural Evolution Calculation and Contingency Oxford Blackwell 1998 Artifacts and Ideas Essays in Archaeology New Brunswick NJ Transaction Publishers 2003 Understanding Early Civilizations A Comparative Study New York Cambridge University Press 2003 A History of Archaeological Thought 2nd ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2006 References edit a b Klejn Leo S 2008 Bruce Trigger in World Archaeology Bulletin of the History of Archaeology 18 2 7 doi 10 5334 bha 18202 a b c d Smith Pamela Jane 2007 Necrology A reflection on Bruce and Barbara Trigger based on oral historical interviews and personal correspondence Bulletin of the History of Archaeology 17 1 52 doi 10 5334 bha 17116 a b c d e f g Patterson Thomas 2014 Trigger Bruce Graham In Smith C ed Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology New York Springer Verlag p 75 doi 10 1007 978 1 4419 0465 2 1298 ISBN 978 1 4419 0465 2 a b Klejn Leo 2008 Bruce Trigger in World Archaeology Bulletin of the History of Archaeology 18 2 6 doi 10 5334 bha 18202 Phillips Jackie S 2007 Bruce Graham Trigger 1937 2006 PDF Mitteilungen der Sudanarchaologischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin e V Heft 18 219 Phillips Jackie S 2007 Bruce Graham Trigger 1937 2006 PDF Mitteilungen der Sudanarchaologischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin e V Heft 18 219 Smith Pamela Jane 2007 Necrology A reflection on Bruce and Barbara Trigger based on oral historical interviews and personal correspondence Bulletin of the History of Archaeology 17 1 53 doi 10 5334 bha 17116 Bruce Trigger 1937 2006 News McGill University Newsroom Institutional Communications McGill University Retrieved 23 April 2020 a b Klejn Leo 2008 Bruce Trigger in World Archaeology Bulletin of the History of Archaeology 18 2 4 doi 10 5334 bha 18202 Phillips Jackie S 2007 Bruce Graham Trigger 1937 2006 PDF Mitteilungen der Sudanarchaologischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin e V Heft 18 219 Trigger Bruce G 1989 History of Archaeological Thought Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521338189 Retrieved 24 April 2020 a b c Trigger Bruce G 2006 A History of Archaeological Thought Cambridge University Press Books doi 10 1017 CBO9780511813016 ISBN 9780521840767 Retrieved 24 April 2020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Fenton William N April 1980 Frederick Starr Jesse Cornplanter and the Cornplanter Medal for Iroquois Research New York History 26 2 New York State Historical Association 186 199 JSTOR 23169465 Phillips Jackie S 2007 Bruce Graham Trigger 1937 2006 Mitteilungen der Sudanarchaologischen Gesellschaft zu Berlin e V Heft 18 220 Bruce Trigger Fonds McGill Library Archival Catalogue Retrieved 2018 02 01 Trigger Bruce G 2003 Artifacts and Ideas Essays in Archaeology Transaction Publishers New Brunswick NJ Trigger Bruce G 2003 1980 Archaeology and the Image of the American Indian In Artifacts and Ideas Originally published in American Antiquity 45 662 676 Williamson Ronald F and Michael S Bisson eds 2006 The Archaeology of Bruce Trigger Theoretical Empiricism McGill Queens s University Press Montreal External links editBruce Graham Trigger at The Canadian Encyclopedia Bruce Trigger Fonds McGill University Library amp Archives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bruce Trigger amp oldid 1178678994, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.