Rev. ed. of: A field guide to stone artifacts of Texas Indians / by Ellen Sue Turner and Thomas R. Heste.
As an easy-to-use reference, this identification guide serves as a valuable introduction to the study of stone tools by both the interested public and serious students of archeology.
STEINER A small, serrated, triangular point that has short projecting spurs at various intervals along the recurved lateral edges. The small, barbed shoulders flare outward, and the stem varies from mildly expanding to rectangular.
Stuart J. Fiedel , Prehistory of the Americas ( New York : Cambridge University Press , 1987 ) , 41-42 , 44 , 45 ; David Hurst Thomas , Exploring Ancient Native America : An Archaeological Guide ( New York : Macmillan , 1994 ) , 2-8 ...
Foreword to Bison Hunting at Cooper Site: Where Lightning Bolts Drew Thundering Herds, by Leland C. Bement. Norman: University of Oklahoma ... Weber, David J. The Spanish Frontier in North America. New Haven: Yale University Press, ...
This comprehensive book contains illustrations and photographs of artifacts, sites, and digs in progress and surveys the most important archeological sites, described in lay terms.
Campbell, T. N. “The Payaya Indians of Southern Texas.” Southern Texas Archaeological Association, Special Publication No. 1, 1975. Campbell, T. N ., and T. J. Campbell. “Historic Indian Groups of the Choke Canyon Reservoir and ...
Wm Jack Hranicky RPA. 1013 - Monrovia Points Monrovia [Notched] Point - named by Wm Jack Hranicky in 1991 after a city in Maryland. It is a side notched point with pointed stem corners. Base is concaved and is not ground.
This comprehensive volume explores in detail the varied experience of native peoples who lived on this land in prehistoric times.
An updated resource for arrowhead collectors incorporates more than twelve thousand black-and-white and color photographs, divided into ten geographic regions including Alaska, to help readers identify and classify their collections, along ...
The Karankawa Indians of Texas is the first modern, well-researched history of the Karankawa from prehistoric times until their extinction in the nineteenth century.