Holocene Hunter-Gatherers of the Lower Ohio River Valley addresses the approximately 7,000 years of the prehistory of eastern North America, termed the Archaic Period by archaeologists.
One of the largest figurine collections in the Midwest comes from the Mann site, located near the junction of the Wabash and Ohio rivers in southwest Indiana. More than 150 figurine frag— ments have been recovered from the site and many ...
Animas–La Plata Project: Ceramic Studies. SWCA Anthropological Research Papers 10, vol. 14. Phoenix: SWCA Environmental Consultants. Bellorado, Benjamin. 2007. “Breaking down the Models: Reconstructing Prehistoric Subsistence ...
Shaman, Priest, Practice, Belief: Materials of Ritual and Religion in Eastern North America broadly considers Native American religion and ritual in eastern North America and focuses on practices that altered and used a vast array of ...
Production editor Kellie Hagan and assistant acquisitions editor Marissa Parks were especially kind and patient. Acquisitions editor Jack Meinhardt had an uncanny capacity to snap me into compliance when I strayed off point.
They are little capsules of our time, a record of ourselves that we share every time they are unveiled at an archeological site, or in a friendly smile. REFERENCES Adovasio, J., Gunn, J.D., Donahue, J., Stuckenrath, R., 1975.
Crothers, George M. 1999 Prehistoric Hunters and Gatherers and the Archaic Period Green River Shell Middens of Western Kentucky. ... Jefferies, Richard W. 2008 Holocene Hunter-Gatherers of the Lower Ohio River Valley.
Excavations of the Falls of the Ohio River region. Filson Club Quarterly, 45, 373–380. Jefferies, R. (2008). Holocene hunter-gatherers of the lower Ohio River Valley. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press. Jefferies, R. W., & Butler ...
2008a Holocene Hunter-Gatherers ofthe Lower Ohio River Valley. The university of Alabama Press, tuscaloosa. 2008b Archaic Period. in The Archaeology ofKentucky: An Update, edited by D. Pollack, pp. 193–338. Kentucky heritage council ...
Houston, Stephen D. 2004 “Writing in Early Mesoamerica.” In The First Writing: Script Invention as History and Process, edited by S.D. Houston, pp. 274–309. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
... on which are seven mounds on the property of Mrs. T. M. Kincaid, and eight on the adjoining land of Messers. T. and E. Lewis. All of these mounds were seen but not measured by us as we were unable to obtain permission to dig them.