Don Fowler is Mamie Kleberg Distinguished Professor of Historic Preservation and Anthropology Emeritus, University of Nevada, Reno. He is author of The Laboratory for Anthropology (University of Utah Press, 2010) and co-editor, with Linda Cordell, of Southwest Archaeology in the Twentieth Century (University of Utah Press, 2005) and numerous other publications on the archaeology and anthropology of the American Southwest.
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ContentsList of IllustrationsForeword by W. L. Rusho Preface and Acknowledgments1. Prelude2. The Glen Canyon Country and Its First Explorers, 1776-1856 3. Mapping and Defining the Glen Canyon Country 4. John Wesley Powell and the Canyon Country, 1867-18695. Powell and the Glen Canyon Country 6. Powell, the U.S. Geological Survey, and the Canyon Country 7. Laccoliths and Grand Staircases: The Work of C. E. Dutton and G. K. Gilbert 8. Glen Canyon Country Geology in the Twentieth Century 9. Colorado Canyon Railroad and Gold Fever: Stanton and Spencer 10. Romancing the Glen Canyon Country 11. Pack Trips and River Running: Exploring the Country for Fun12. Harnessing the Colorado River 13. Early Archaeology in the Glen Canyon Country14. The Enamored Explorers 15. The Glen Canyon Project: Beginnings 16. Implementing the Glen Canyon Project 17. The 1959 and 1960 Seasons 18. The 1961 and 1962 Seasons 19. The Museum of Northern Arizona and the Glen Canyon Project 20. Lives and Times of Sojourners in the Glen Canyon Country 21. Postlude: The Glen Canyon Country of the Imagination Notes Bibliography Index
"I have read literally dozens of books about Glen Canyon and Lake Powell. Even so, I found Don's book fresh, innovative, and a real contribution to our knowledge of this important place. With a charming narrative voice, he recounts a living history everyone can enjoy, breathing new life into those now submerged cliffs and canyons on every page."--Bookin' with Sunny "I found the book engrossing for both the sheer breadth of its account and for its interesting personal sidelights on some of the characters that the Glen Canyon country has attracted. The book will have a permanent place in the scholarly literature on the Glen Canyon country."--C. Melvin Aikens, University of Oregon "No one has brought together so many different facets of the Glen Canyon story: prehistory, history, exploration, scientific study, exploitation, recreational use, and use for water storage and power." --Roy D. Webb, University of Utah