Navajo Publications

PRINCIPAL PUBLICATIONS OF STEPHEN C. JETT, PH.D.,

RELATING TO THE NAVAJO AND THE NAVAJO COUNTRY

 

 

Books, Monographs, and Articles

1.    1964      Pueblo Indian Migrations: An Evaluation of the Possible Physical  and Cultural Determinants. American Antiquity, Vol. 29, No. 3,  281-30. Salt Lake City: Society for American Archaeology.

2.    1965      Red Rock Country. Plateau, Vol. 37, No. 3, pp. 80-84. Flagstaff: Museum of Northern Arizona.

3.    1965      Reply to Ellis’ “Comment” on “Pueblo Indian Migrations.” American Antiquity, Vol. 31, No. 1, pp. 116-118. Salt Lake City: Society for American Archaeology.

4.    1965      Open Season on Arches. Desert, Vol. 28, No. 5, pp. 22-23. Palm Desert, CA: Desert Magazine.

5.    1965      Comment on Davis’ Hypothesis on Pueblo Indian Migrations.  American Antiquity, Vol. 31, No. 2, pp. 276-277. Salt Lake City:  Society for American Archaeology

6.    1966      Tourism in the Navajo Country: Resources and Planning. Navajoland Publications, Series A, 184 pp. + map. Window Rock, AZ: Navajo Tribal Museum.

7.    1967a      Philip Hyde [photographer] and _________ [writer]. Navajo Wildlands:as long as the rivers shall run’, ed. Kenneth Brower. Exhibit Format Series, No. 14, ed. David R. Brower, 160 pp. + 19.5” x 35” map [also published as C-2] (includes 75 photographs, plus selections from other authors). San Francisco: Sierra Club. [printing of 12,000; exists in two states]

7b.    1967b      Philip Hyde [photographer] and _________ [writer]. Navajo Country. Audubon, Vol. 69, No. 1, pp. 22-27. New York: National Audubon Society. [pre-publication variant excerpt from entry 7a]

7c.    1968      Navajo Wildlands. Sierra Club Bulletin, Vol. 53, No. 1, p. 31. San Francisco: The Sierra Club. [excerpt from entry 7a]

7d.    1968      [Excerpt from entry 7a]. Fifty Books of the Year l967, Exhibition Year 1968, p. 34. New York: The American Institute of Graphic Arts.

7e.    1969      Navajo Wildlands: ‘as long as the rivers shall run’ [very slightly revised, soft-bound edition of entry A-7a, without map]. New York: Sierra Club-Ballantine Books. [printing of circa 70,000]

8.    1967      Obscure Arch in Navajoland. Western Gateways, Vol. 7, No. 3, 28-29. Flagstaff: K. C. Publications. [editor-reviewed]

9.    1970      An Analysis of Navajo Place-Names. Names, Vol. 18, No. 3, pp. 175-184. Potsdam, New York: American Name Society.

10.    1971      Virginia E. Spencer and _________. Navajo Dwellings of Rural Black Creek Valley, Arizona-New Mexico. Plateau, Vol. 43, No. 4, pp.159-175. Flagstaff: Museum of Northern Arizona.

11.    1973      Testimony of the Sacredness of Rainbow Natural Bridge to Puebloans, Navajos, and Paiutes. Plateau, Vol. 45, No. 4, pp. 133-142. Flagstaff: Museum of Northern Arizona.

12.    1974      The Journals of George C. Fraser ‘93: Early Twentieth-Century Travels in the South and Southwest. The Princeton University Library Chronicle, Vol. 35, No. 3, pp. 290-308 + 5 pp. of photographs by Fraser. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, for the Friends of the Princeton University Library. [editor-reviewed; http://libweb5.princeton.edu/visual_materials/pulc/pulc_v_35_n_3.pdf]

13.    1974      The Destruction of Navajo Orchards in 1864: Captain John Thompson’s Report. Arizona and the West: A Quarterly Journal of History, Vol. 16, No. 4, pp. 365-378. Tucson: The University of Arizona Press. [editor-reviewed]

14.    1975      Canyon de Chelly. Places, Vol. 2, No. 1, pp. 39-40. Indiana, PA: Donald J. Ballas. [editor-reviewed]

15.    1976      Interwoven Heritage: A Bicentennial Exhibition of Southwestern Indian Basketry and Textile Arts, Featuring the C. Hart Merriam Collection of Baskets and the Stephen C. Jett Collection of Navajo Weaving, January 9 – February 8, 1976 (44 pp. + 4 pp. of photographs by others). Davis: Memorial Union Art Gallery, University of California, Davis.

16.    1976      Pleasures Afield on the Colorado Plateau. Places, Vol. 3, No. 2, pp. 8-10. Indiana, PA: Donald J. Ballas. [editor-reviewed]

17.    1977      Dave Bohn [photographer] and _________ [writer]. House of Three Turkeys: Anasazi Redoubt, 64 pp. (includes excerpts from other authors). A Noel Young Book. Santa Barbara: Capra Press. [editor-reviewed; Issued both in hard-bound signed limited-edition and softbound forms; synopsized in Thomas Mails, The Pueblo Children of the Earth Mother, Vol. 1, pp. 282-285, 485, 502. Garden City, NY: Doubleday & Company.]

18.    1977      History of Fruit Tree Raising among the Navajo. Agricultural History, Vol. 51, No. 4, pp. 681-701. Berkeley: The University of California Press, for the Agricultural History Society. [refereed]

19.    1978      The Origins of Navajo Settlement Patterns. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Vol. 68, No. 3, pp. 351-362. Washington: Association of American Geographers. [refereed]

20.    1978      Navajo Seasonal Migration Patterns. The Kiva, Vol. 44, No. 1, 65-75. Tucson: Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society, Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona. [refereed]

21.    1979      Comment in Reply [to: “In Search of the Navajo’s Canadian Connection,” by Marilyn R. Wagner and Richard W. Travis]. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Vol. 69, No. 3, pp. 482-485. Washington: Association of American Geographers. [editor reviewed]

22.    1979      Peach Cultivation and Use among the Canyon de Chelly Navajo. Economic Botany, Vol. 3, No. 33, pp. 298-310. Bronx, NY: New York Botanical Garden. [refereed]

 23.    1980      Rainbow Bridge Country. In: Clyde Kluckhohn, To the Foot of the Rainbow, illustrated edition, pp. xi-xxiv. Glorieta, NM: The Rio Grande Press. [editor-reviewed; Rainbow Bridge portion, pp. 28-31, of Ronald E. Everhart, Glen Canyon-Lake Powell: The Story behind the Scenery, KC Publications, Las Vegas, 1983, is based on this item.]

24.    1980      The Navajo Homestead: Situation and Site. Yearbook of the Association of Pacific Coast Geographers, Vol. 42, pp. 101-118. Corvallis, OR: Association of Pacific Coast Geographers. [refereed]

25.    1981      _________ and Virginia E. Spencer. Navajo Architecture: Forms, History, Distributions, xx + 289 pp. (includes 204 plates and figs. and 7 maps, some by others, 6 tables, and index). Tucson: The University of Arizona Press. [issued in both cloth- and paper-bound forms; available as of 1996 via Arizona Books on Request, using DocuTech technology; published on microfiche by Human Relations Area Files, Yale University, New Haven, CT, 2004, Indigenous Cultures of North America, Navajo: NT13; refereed]

26.    1981      War Dogs in the Spanish Expedition Mural, Canyon del Muerto, Arizona? The Kiva, Vol. 46, No. 4, pp. 273-280. Tucson: Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society, Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona. [refereed]

27.    1982      “Ye’iis Lying Down,” a Unique Navajo Sacred Place. In: David M. Brugge and Charlotte J. Frisbie, eds., Navajo Religion and Culture: Selected Studies. Papers in Honor of Dr. Leland C. Wyman. Museum of New Mexico, Papers in Anthropology, No. 17, pp. 138-149. Santa Fe: Museum of New Mexico Press. [editor-reviewed]

28.    1984      Making the “Stars” of Navajo “Planetaria.” The Kiva, Vol. 50, No. 1, pp. 25-40. Tucson:   Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society, Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona. [refereed]

29.    1986      An Alphabetical Inscription from Navajo Mountain, Arizona, and the Theories of Barry Fell. In: Anne Poore, ed., By Hands Unknown: Papers on Rock Art and Archaeology in Honor of James Bain, Papers of the Archaeological Society of New Mexico, Vol. 12, pp. 18-30. Albuquerque: Albuquerque Archaeological Society Press. [editor-reviewed; summarized 2002 by James H. Knipmeyer, Butch Cassidy Was Here: Historic inscriptions of the Colorado Plateau, University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City, pp. 2-3]

30a.    1987      Cultural Fusion in Native-American Folk Architecture: The Navajo Hogan. In: Thomas G. Ross and Tyrel G. Moore, eds., A Cultural Geography of North American Indians, pp. 243-256. Boulder: Westview Press. [chapter editor-reviewed; book refereed; see also, entry 54b]

30b.    1996      Cultural Fusion in Native-American Folk Architecture: The Navajo Hogan. In: Thomas G. Ross, Tyrel G. Moore, and Laura R. King, eds., American Indians: A Cultural Geography, 2nd edition, pp. 227-240. Southern Pines, NC: Karo Hollow Press. [reprinting of entry 54a]

31.    1989      Dick Winchell, James M. Goodman, _________, and Martha L. Henderson. Geographic Research on Native Americans. In: Gary L. Gaile and Cort J. Wilmott, eds., Geography in America, 239-255 [pp. 242-243 and part of pp. 249-255 by Jett]. Columbus: Merrill Publishing Company. [editor-reviewed; refereed]

32.    1990      Culture and Tourism in the Navajo Country. In: Klaus J. Meyer-Arendt and Geoffrey Wall, eds., North American Tourism and Cultural Geography, special issue of Journal of Cultural Geography, Vol. 11, No. 1, pp. 85-107. Bowling Green, OH: Bowling Green State University Popular Press, in cooperation with the popular Culture Association and the American Culture Association. [editor- and guest-editor reviewed] available at: http://www.geo.hunter.cuny.edu/courses/geog347/articles/culture_country.pdf

33.    1991      Pete Price, Navajo Medicineman: A Brief Biography. American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 15, No. 1, pp. 95-107. Berkeley: The Native American Studies Program, University of California. [refereed; also electronically reprinted by Questia, at ]

34a.    1992      The “Great Race” to “Discover” Rainbow Natural Bridge in 1909. Kiva: The Journal of Southwestern Anthropology and History, Vol. 58, No. 1, cover, pp. 3-66. Tucson: Arizona Archaeological and Historical Society, Arizona State Museum, University of Arizona. [refereed; also reprinted electronically, U. S. National Park Service, at: http://www.nps.gov/rabr/learn/historyculture/upload/Stephen%20Jett%20Article.pdf”; also, http://weatherillfamily.com/Stephen%20Jettarticle.pdf; see also, entry 34b]

34b.    1999      From “The Great Race to ‘Discover’ Rainbow Natural Bridge in 1909.” In special issue, “A Tribute to Bridges,” Canyon Legacy: Journal of the Dan O’Laurie Canyon Country Museum, Vol. 36, 20-27. Moab, UT. [excerpt from 34a; editor-reviewed]

35.    1992      Landscape Expressions of Navajo Games and Amusements, Canyon de Chelly Area, Arizona. Material Culture: The Journal of the Pioneer America Society, Vol. 24, No. 3, 35-44. Normal, IL: Pioneer America Society. [refereed]

36.    1992      The Navajo in the American Southwest. Chapter 18 in: Allen G. Noble, ed., To Build in a New Land: Ethnic Landscapes in North America, Creating the North American Landscape series, pp. 331-344, 417-418 + ca. 2 pp. of combined bibliography. Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press. [chapter editor-reviewed; book refereed]

37.    1992      An Introduction to Navajo Sacred Places. Journal of Cultural Geography, Vol. 13, No. 2, pp. 29-39, [special section on American Indians, ed. by George Van Otten and Stephen C. Jett]. Bowling Green, OH: Bowling Green State University Popular Press, in cooperation with the Popular Culture Association and the American Culture Association. [editor- and guest-editor reviewed]

38.    1993      Oriental Carpets and the Storm Pattern Navajo Rug Design. In: Meliha S. Duran and David T. Kirkpatrick, eds.,Why Museums Collect: Papers in Honor of Joe Ben Wheat, The Archaeological Society of New Mexico 19, pp. 103-125. Albuquerque: Archaeological Society of New Mexico. [editor-reviewed]

39.    1994      Documenting and Naming Jett Arch. Span: The Newsletter of The Natural Arch and Bridge Society, Vol. 6, No. 1, pp. 4-5. Ridgecrest, CA: The Natural Arch and Bridge Society. [editor-reviewed]

40.    1994      Physical Characteristics of Navajo Trails, Canyon de Chelly Area, Arizona. Material Culture, Vol. 26, No. 1, pp. 37-48. Normal, IL: Pioneer America Society. [refereed; later adapted for entry 51]

41.    1994      Cairn Trail Shrines of the Navajo, the Apache, and Puebloans, and of the Far North. In: Meliha S. Duran and David T. Kirkpatrick, eds., Artifacts, Shrines, and Pueblos: Papers in Honor of  Gordon Page, The Archaeological Society of New Mexico 20, pp. 129-145. Albuquerque: The Archaeological Society of New Mexico [editor-reviewed]

42.    1995      Navajo Sacred Places: Management and Interpretation of Mythic History. The Public Historian, Vol. 17, No. 2, pp. 39-47. Berkeley and Santa Barbara: University of California Press and the National Council on Public History. [refereed]

43a.    1996      Modern Navajo Cemeteries. Material Culture, Vol. 28, No. 2, pp. 1-23. Normal, IL: Pioneer America Society. [refereed; see also, entry A-80b] 

43b.    1998      Modern Navajo Cemeteries. In: George Carney, ed., Baseball, Barns, and Bluegrass: A Geography of American Folklife, pp 218-Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. [reprinting of entry A-80a, minus 6 illus.]

44.    1997      Place-Naming, Environment, and Perception among the Canyon de Chelly Navajo of Arizona. In special section on placename geography edited by Wilbur Zelinsky, The Professional Geographer, Vol. 49, No. 4, pp. 481-493. Washington: Association of American Geographers. [peer-reviewed]

45a.    1997      Southwest. In: Paul Oliver, ed., Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World, Vol. 3, Cultures and Habitats, pp. 1919-Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [editor-reviewed]

46a.    1997      Navajo: Kayenta (AZ, UT, NM). In: Paul Oliver, ed., Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World, Vol. 3, Cultures and Habitats, p. 1934. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [editor-reviewed]

46b.    2018      Navajo: Peripheral (AZ, UT, NM). In: Marcel Velling, ed., Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World, 2nd ed., Vol. ?,. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. [much-revised version of 84a, above; editor-reviewed; in press]

47a.    1997      Navajo: Window Rock (AZ, NM). In: Paul Oliver, ed., Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World, Vol. 3, Cultures and Habitats, pp. 1935-1936. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. [editor-reviewed]

47b.    2018      Navajo: Central (AZ, NM). In: Marcel Velling, ed., Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World, 2nd ed., Vol. ?, pp.  London: Bloomsbury Publishing. [much-revised version of 85a, above; editor-reviewed; in press]

48.    1998      Territory and Hogan: Local Homelands of the Navajo. In: Meliha Duran and David T. Kirkpatrick, eds., Diné Bíkéyah: Papers in Honor of David M. Brugge. Archaeological Society of New Mexico 24, pp. 117-128. Albuquerque: The Archaeological Society of New Mexico. [editor-reviewed]

49.    1998      Scenic Resources and Tourism Development in the Navajo Country. In: Alan Lew and George A. Van Otten, eds., Tourism and Gaming on American Indian Lands, Tourism Dynamics Series, 93-110 + entries in combined bibliography. Elmsford, NY: Cognizant Communication Corporation. [refereed]

50.    1999      Five Hundred Years of Puebloan and European Influence on Navajo Architecture. In: Howard B. Benoist, ed., After the Encounter: A Continuing Process: Selected Papers and Commenaries from the November 1992 Columbus Quincentenary Symposium, pp. 67-73. San Antonio: U. S. National Park Service and Los Compadres de San Antonio Missions National Historical Park. [editor-reviewed]

51.    2001      [                   , with Chauncey M. Neboyia, William Morgan, Sr., and Robert W. Young]. Navajo Placenames and Trails of the  Canyon de Chelly System, Arizona, xxi + 248 pp. American Indian Studies, Vol. 12. New York: Peter Lang Publishing. [refereed; includes modified versions of entries A-75 and A-83 and publication C-1]

52.    2002      The Navajo Homeland. Chapter 11 in Richard L. Nostrand and Lawrence E. Estaville, eds., Homelands: A Geography of Culture and Place across America, pp. 168-183 + combined bibliography. Creating the North American Landscape. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, in cooperation with the Center for American Places. [also exists in electronic form; refereed]

53.    2005      Navajo-Modified Living Trees and Cradleboard Manufacture. Material Culture: The Journal of the Pioneer America Society, Vol. 37, No. 1, pp. 131-142, 179. Springfield, OH: Pioneer America Society. [peer-reviewed]

54.    2006      Reconstructing the Itineraries of Navajo Chantway Stories: A Trial at Canyon de Chelly, Arizona. In: Regge N. Wiseman, Thomas C. O’Laughlin, and Cordelia T. Snow, eds., Southwestern Interludes: Papers in Honor of Charlotte J. and Theodore R. Frisbie, pp. 75-86. Archaeological Society of New Mexico 32. Albuquerque: The Archaeological Society of New Mexico. [editorial-board-reviewed]

55.    2007      George F. Carter, 1912-2004. Geographers Biobibliographical Studies, Vol. 26, pp. 27-49. London: Continuum, for the Commission on the History of Geographical Thought of the International Geographical Union and the International Union of the History and Philosophy of Science. [editor-reviewed]

56.    2011      Landscape Embedded in Language: The Navajo of Canyon de Chelly, Arizona, and Their Named Places. In: David M. Mark, Andrew Turk, Niclas Burenhult, and David Stea, eds., Landscape in Language: Transdisciplinary Perspectives, pp. 327-342. Culture and Language Use: Studies in Anthropological Linguistics 4, Gunter Senft, ed. Amsterdam and Philadelphia: John Benjamins Publishing Company. [peer-reviewed]

57.    2014      Place Names as the Traditional Navajo’s Title-deeds, Border-alert System, Remote Sensing, Global Positioning System, Memory Bank, and Monitor Screen. Creative Mappings section. Journal  of Cultural Geography 31, No. 1, pp. 106-13. Stillwater, OK: JCG Press/Abingdon, Oxfordshire: Taylor & Francis. [editor-reviewed]

58.    2014      Last Trip down the Escalante and Glen Canyon. In Ken Sleight’s Allies & Accomplices, ed. Greg Henning, Celia Alario, and Martha Ham, pp. 22-34. St. George, UT: Martha Ham. [editor-reviewed]

59.    2018      Direct Borrowings and Loan-Translations of Navajo Toponyms into New Mexican Spanish: Examples and Explanations. In Language, Landscape, and Toponomy in Alaska and Beyond, ed. Tom Thornton and Gary Holton. Fairbanks, AK: Alaska Native Languages Center Press, University of Alaska, Fairbanks, 34 typed pp. [peer-reviewed; in press]

 

Published Hearings Statements*

1.    1966      Statement of Dr. Stephen C. Jett, Assistant Professor of Geography, University of California. Hearings before the Subcommittee on Irrigation and Reclamation of the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs House Representatives Eighty-ninth Congress Second Session on H.R. 4671 and Similar Bills to Authorize Construction, Operation, and Maintenance of the Lower Colorado River Basin Project, and for Other Purposes. Serial No. 89-17, Pt. 2, pp. 1581-1587. Washington: U. S. Government Printing Office.

2.    1967      Statement of Stephen C. Jett, in Behalf of the Navajo Tribe of Indians. Hearings before the Subcommittee on Irrigation and Reclamation of the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs House of Representatives Ninetieth Congress First Session on H.R. 3300 and Similar Bills to Authorize the Construction, Operation, and Maintenance of the Colorado River Basin Project, and for Other Purposes — S. 20 and Similar Bills to Provide for a Comprehensive Review of National Resource Problems and Programs, and for Other Purposes, Serial 90-5, pp. 490-516 (includes 18 pp. of Navajo Tribal documents). Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office.

3.    1967      Statement of Stephen C. Jett, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Geography, University of California, Davis. Hearings before the Subcommittee on Water and Power Resources of the Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs United States Senate Ninetieth Congress First Session on S. 1044, S. 861, S. 1241, and S. 1409 Bills to Authorize the Construction, Operation, and Maintenance of the Central Arizona Project, and for Other Purposes, pp 707-709. Washington: U.S. Government Printing Office.

 

*Pagination includes colloquy

 

Sheet Maps

1.    1963      Canyon de Chelly National Monument [black-and-white, 23” x 25”]. [Tucson]: privately printed by the compiler. [modified and incorporated into publication A-101: pp. 175-182]

2.    1967      ________ and James Cutter. Map of the Navajo Country [two-color, 19 1/2” x 35”]. San Francisco: Sierra Club. [also issued as part of publication A-8.]

 

Reviews

1.    1969      Historical Atlas of New Mexico [Warren A. Beck and Ynez D. Hasse]. The Professional Geographer, Vol. 21, No. 5, p. 380. Washington: Association of American Geographers.

2.    1972      Southwest: Three Peoples in Geographic Transition [Donald W. Meinig]. The Professional Geographer, Vol. 24, No. 3, pp. 284-Washington: Association of American Geographers.

3.    1984      The Navajo Atlas: Environments, Resources, People, and History of the Diné Bikeyah [James M. Goodman]. The Journal of Geography, Vol. 83, No. 6, p. 298. Macomb, IL: National Council for Geographic Educacation.

4.    1984      The Navajo Atlas: Environments, Resources, People, and History of the Diné Bikeyah [James M. Goodman]. American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 8, No. 3, pp. 252-254. Berkeley: Department of Native American Studies, University of California.

5.    1985      Analyzing Activity Areas: An Ethnoarchaeological Study of the  Use of Space [Susan Kent]. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Vol. 75, No. 2, pp. 285-287. Washington: Association of American Geographers.

6.    1985      The Anthropology of Space: Explorations into the Natural Philosophy and Semantics of the Navajo [Rik Pinxten, Ingrid van Dooren, and Frank Harvey]. The Professional Geographer, Vol. 37, No. 3, p. 379. Washington: Association of American Geographers.

7.    1988      Navajo Weaving: Three Hundred Years of Change [Kate Peck Kent]. American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 12, No. 2, pp. 176-178. Berkeley: The Native American Studies Program, University of California.

8.    1991      American Indians: The First of This Land [C. Matthew Snipp]. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, Vol. 81, No. 4, pp. 707-710. Washington: Association of American Geographers.

9.    1993      Western Apache Heritage: People of the Mountain Corridor [Richard J. Perry]. American Indian Quarterly, Vol. 17, No. 1, 135-137. Berkeley: The Native American Studies Program, University of California. [also published electronically as publication O-2]

10.    1993      Tall Sheep: Harry Goulding, Monument Valley Trader [Samuel Moon]. The Journal of American History, Vol. 80, No. 2, p. 728. Bloomington, IN: Organization of American Historians.

 

Guest Editorials and Columns

1.    1969      Let’s Have More Parks [guest editorial]. Western Gateways, Vol. 9, No. 3, p. 4. Flagstaff: KC Publications. [editor-reviewed]

 

Bibliography

1.    1994      A Bibliography of North American Geographers’ Works on Native Americans North of Mexico, 1971-1991. Haskell Indian Nations University Studies in the Geography of the American Indian, No. 1, i-x, 1-82. Lawrence, KN: Haskell Indian Nations University. [includes 2-pp. Preface by Daniel R. Wildcat, and 22-pp. Appendix compiled by Michael Caron]

 

Audio and Visual Media

1.    1975      [Ann Atwood (adaptor)], Philip Hyde (photographer), and (writer).] Navajo Wildlands Series. Two filmstrips with audio-cassette sound; total running time, 29 minutes: Part 1, “Created-from-everything”; Part 2, “The place that comes at one”; teacher’s guide Laguna Beach, CA: Lyceum Productions. [adapted from publication A-8a]

2.    1992      [Five Hundred Years of Puebloan and European Influence on Navajo Architecture]. In: W. Doolittle, R. Francaviglia, ________, and C. Pennington, Cultural Lanscapes of the Americas: “Southwestern Landscapes”, “Influences on SW Architecture,” 2 audiocassettes from After the Encounter: A Continuing Process, sponsored by National Park Service and Los Compadres de San Antonio Missions. San Antonio: Rollin’ Recording. [audiocassette version of publication A-94]

 

Limited-Distribution Items*

1. 1966      Tourism in the Navajo Country: Resources and Planning, 262 pp. + map. Doctoral dissertation 65-4136, published in microfilm and Xerography. Ann Arbor: University Microfilms. [See publication A-7].

2. 1981      Preliminary Statement of Stephen C. Jett, Ph.D., Professor of Geography and Chairperson of the Department, University of California, Davis, Respecting The San Francisco Peaks as a Navajo Sacred Place. Affidavit filed in Federal District Court, District of Columbia, in Navajo Medicine Men’s Association vs. Black, 11 typed pp. Davis, CA.

3. 1997      Preliminary Bibliography of Published Writings on Rainbow Natural Bridge, 1909-1991, 46 typed pp. On file, U.S. National Park Service, Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, Page, AZ. [updated periodically]