BIBLIOGRAPHY - TOPAZ BASIN



Arizona Bureau of Mines (1958). Geologic map of Yavapai County Arizona. Arizona Bureau of Mines, Tucson: University of Arizona

Bouška, V., Ed. (1993). Natural Glasses. New York: Ellis Horwood.


Burt, D.M., T.C. Moyer, and E.H. Christiansen (1981). Garnet and topaz bearing rhyolites from near Burro Creek, Mohave County, Arizona – possible exploration significance. Arizona Geological Society Bulletin 13, 1-4.
 

Church, T. (2000). Distribution and sources of obsidian in the Rio Grande gravels of New Mexico. Geoarchaeology 15, 649-678.
 

Fink, J.H., and S.W. Anderson (2000). Lava domes and coulees. In H. Sigurdsson (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Volcanoes, (pp. 307-320). San Diego: Academic Press.
 

Fink, J.H., and C. R. Manley (1987). Origin of pumiceous and glassy textures in rhyolite flows and domes. In J.H. Fink (Ed.), The Emplacement of Silicic Domes and Lava Flows, (pp. 77-88). Geological Society of America Special Paper 212. Boulder, Colorado.
 

Lewis, R.E. (1983). Geology of Hackberry Mountain volcanic center, Yavapai County, Arizona. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena.
 

Hughes, R. E., and Smith, R.L. (1993). Archaeology, geology, and geochemistry in obsidian provenance studies. In Stein, J.K. and Linse, A.R. (Eds.), Scale on Archaeological and Geoscientific Perspectives, (pp. 79-91). Boulder: Geological Society of America Special Paper 283.
 

Menges, C.M., Pearthree, P.A. (1989). Late Cenozoic tectonism in Arizona and its impact on regional landscape evolution. In J.P. Jenney, and S.J. Reynolds (Eds.) Geological Evolution in Arizona, (pp. 649-680). Arizona Geological Digest 17. Tucson: Arizona Geological Society.
 

Moyer, T. C. (1982). The volcanic geology of the Kaiser Spring area, SE Mohave county, Arizona. Unpublished Master's Thesis, Department of Geology, Arizona State University, Tempe.
 

Moyer, T.C. (1986). The Pliocene Kaiser Spring (AZ) bimodal volcanic field: geology, geochemistry, and petrogenesis. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Geology, Arizona State University, Tempe.
 

Moyer, T.C., and Esperanca, S. (1989). Geochemical and isotopic variations in a bimodal magma system: the Kaiser Spring Volcanic Field, Arizona. Journal of Geophysical Research 94, 7841-7859.
 

Nealy, L.D., and Sheridan, M.F. (1989). Post-Laramide volcanic rocks of Arizona and northern Sonora, Mexico, and their inclusions. In J.P. Jenney, and S.J. Reynolds (Eds.) Geological Evolution in Arizona, (pp. 609-648). Arizona Geological Digest 17. Tucson: Arizona Geological Society.
 

Shackley, M.S. (1988). Sources of archaeological obsidian in the Southwest: an archaeological, petrological, and geochemical study. American Antiquity 53, 752-772.
 

Shackley, M.S. (1990). Early hunter-gatherer procurement ranges in the Southwest: evidence from obsidian geochemistry and lithic technology. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Arizona State University, Tempe.
 

Shackley, M.S. (1992). The Upper Gila River Gravels as an archaeological obsidian source region: implications for models of exchange and interaction. Geoarchaeology 7, 315-326
 

Shackley, M.S. (1995). Sources of archaeological obsidian in the greater American Southwest: an update and quantitative analysis. American Antiquity 60, 531-551.
 

Shackley, M.S. (1998a). Geochemical differentiation and prehistoric procurement of obsidian in the Mount Taylor Volcanic Field, Northwest New Mexico. Journal of Archaeological Science 25, 1073-1082.
 

Shackley, M.S. (1998b). Intrasource chemical variability and secondary depositional processes in sources of archaeological obsidian: lessons from the American Southwest. In M.S. Shackley (Ed.) Archaeological Obsidian Studies: Method and Theory, (pp. 83-102), Advances in Archaeological and Museum Science 3. New York: Springer/Plenum Publishing.
 

Shackley, M.S. (2005a). Obsidian: Geology and Archaeology in the North American Southwest. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
 

Shackley, M.S. (2005b). Source provenance of obsidian artifacts from late period sites in the Perry Mesa area, central Arizona. Report prepared for the Center for Desert Archaeology, Tucson, Arizona.
 

Shackley, M.S. (2008). Source provenance of obsidian artifacts from Fourmile Ruin (AZ P:12:4 ASM), Shumway Ruin (AZ P:12:127 ASM), and Pinedale Ruin (AZ P:12:2 ASM), Silver Creek area, northern Arizona. Report prepared for Scott Van Keuren, Department of Anthropology, University of Vermont, Burlington.

Shackley, M.S. (2009), The Topaz Basin Archaeological Obsidian Source in the Transition Zone of Central Arizona.  Geoarchaeology 24(3): 336-347.
 

Shackley, M.S., and D.B. Tucker (2001) Limited prehistoric procurement of Sand Tank obsidian, southwestern Arizona. Kiva 66, 345-374.
 

Wilcox, D.R., and J. Holmlund (2007). The Archaeology of Perry Mesa and Its World. Bilby Research Center Occasional Papers 3, Flagstaff: Northern Arizona University.
 

Wilcox, D.R., G. Robertson, Jr., and J.S. Wood (2001). Organized for war: the Perry Mesa settlement system and its Central Arizona neighbors. In G.E. Rice and S.A. LeBlanc (Eds.) Deadly Landscapes: Case Studies in Prehistoric Southwestern Warfare, (pp. 109-140). Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.
 

Wittke, J.H. (1984). Geochemistry and isotope geology of basalts of the Arizona Transition Zone (Yavapai County) and their tectonic significance. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Texas, Austin.