1. Allen, R. (1998). Native Americans at Mission Santa Cruz, 1791–1834: Interpreting the Archaeological Record. Institute of Archaeology, University of California, Los Angeles.
2. Allen, R., Felton, D. E., and Corey, C. (2013). Ceramic trends and timeline from a California perspective. In Allen, R., Huddleson, J. E., Wooten, K. J., and Farris, G. J. (eds.), Ceramic Identification in Historical Archaeology: The View from California, 1822–1940. Society for Historical Archaeology. Germantown, MD, pp. 25–52.
3. Amundsen-Meyer, N. E. and Pickering, D. (eds.) (2011). Identity Crisis: Archaeological Perspectives on Social Identity,Proceedings of the 42nd (2010) Annual Chacmool Archaeological Conference, Chacmool Archaeological Association, University of Calgary, Calgary.
4. Arkush, B. S. (2011). Native responses to European intrusion: cultural persistence and agency among mission neophytes in Spanish colonial California. Historical Archaeology 45(4):62–90.
5. Arnold, J. E. (ed.) (2001). The Origins of a Pacific Coast Chiefdom: The Chumash of the Channel Islands. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.