Archives of the Eleventh Headwaters Conference, November 3-5, 2000
Papers presented at the 11th Headwaters Conference
Titles are links to the papers:
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5,000 Years of Sustainable Economy in the Upper Gunnison Basin
by Mark Stiger, anthropology professor at Western State College, and principal archaeologist at the Tenderfoot Archaeological Site near Gunnison. -
Will the Real Commodity Please Stand Up? Skiing and Real Estate in Eagle County
by Sarah Hautzinger, Anneke Faas and Kerri Dixon, anthropology professor and students, The Colorado College. This paper takes you to the Colorado College web site, so you will need to use the "Back" or "Go To" function to return to the Headwaters Papers. -
An Underground Tradition: The Historic Roots of America's Informal and Regional Economies
by Laura McCall, historian and author, Metropolitan State College of Denver. -
Silver Threads: One Hundred Years of Travel in a Day
by T. L. Livermore, Gunnison businessman and explorer in the region.Clicking on the title above takes you outside the Reader web site; so to return to this site, use the "Back" arrow function on your browser. -
Telluride's Mining Past, Resort Present, and Possible Green Future
by Art Goodtimes, San Miguel County Commissioner, Poet and Renaissance Man. Goodtimes can be contacted at goodtimes@independence.net. -
Disruptions in Community Attachment: The social-psychological impacts of rapid economic and demographic change
by Jennifer Cross, sociologist from Colorado's Front Range, paper adapted from a dissertation for University of California/Davis. -
Labor in the Headwaters Region, Past and Present
by Rod Rogers and Wayne Horman, formerly with the Petroleum, Chemcial and Nuclear Workers Union, now retired in the Gunnison Valley. -
The Gunnison Economy Past and Present: A Sketch of Changes Towards An Amenity-Based Regional Economy
by Dr. Walt Hecox and Travis Rummel, Professor of Economics and student (Class of 2001) at The Colorado College, Colorado Springs. WHecox@ColoradoCollege.edu
Clicking on the title above takes you to the Colorado College web site; to return to this site, use the "Back" arrow or "Go To" function on your browser.
