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university alabama press archaeology of the lower muskogee creek indians 1715-1836 jan 2007

university alabama press archaeology of the lower muskogee creek indians 1715-1836 jan 2007

university alabama press archaeology of the lower muskogee creek indians 1715-1836 jan 2007

... house the Indians Consult about the affairs of their Nation in the Winter Season and in22 / Foster The purpose of this book is to investigate the diversity of the people referredto as the Muskogee ... Cabinseach. The seats are made of Canes Split and worked together raised about threefeet off the Ground; and half the width of the House, the back half being raisedabove the other about one foot; these ... perspective of the physicalconditions and constraints to which the Lower Muskogee Creek Indians wereadapting. Chapter 3 is a review of the history of archaeological investigationsin the Lower Chattahoochee...
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university alabama press the archaeology of town creek nov 2007

university alabama press the archaeology of town creek nov 2007

... of features, most of which The Archaeology of Town Creek EDMOND A. BOUDREAUX THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA PRESS Tuscaloosa12 / Chapter 1.large portions of the site were not excavated beyond the ... inter-pretation of the two concentric patterns is that the outer circle represents the wall of the structure and the inner the remains of an interior roof support system. Alternatively, the inner ... focuses on the areas north and south of the plaza where virtually all of the buildings have been assigned to a structure type, the architecture found in three other portions of the site— the mound...
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university alabama press catawba indian pottery the survival of a folk tradition jan 2004

university alabama press catawba indian pottery the survival of a folk tradition jan 2004

... when they scratch their name and the words“Catawba Indian” on the bottom of a vessel they are making history.Today some of the young master potters even number their vessels in the hope of increasing ... Elizaworked together. Ervin gathered the wood and burned the pottery. The Gordons also kept a sign on the road in front of their home and shared the proceeds from the sales of their work (Georgia Harris, ... into them and otherwooden objects. The triumph of the Catawba Nation rests in its potterytradition, which is a cultural treasure of tremendous worth. Of all the tribes east of the Pueblo only the...
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university alabama press circular villages of the monongahela tradition aug 2007

university alabama press circular villages of the monongahela tradition aug 2007

... NORTHEAST The archaeological record of large parts of the Northeast during the Late Pre-historic period is organized around a series of culture-historic taxa, many de-veloped by the 1950s. These ... especially in the vicinity of the Borough of Meyersdale (Means 2002c). The Allegheny Mountains region isdrained by the Youghiogheny and Casselman rivers, which form a portion of the headwaters of the ... question of technology but rather one of changing social relations.Therefore, it is not surprising that tribal social networks became more wide-spread in the Northeast by the beginning of the Late...
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university alabama press household chores and household choices theorizing the domestic sphere in historical archaeology jun 2004

university alabama press household chores and household choices theorizing the domestic sphere in historical archaeology jun 2004

... Relations; and The Subversive Poetics of Housework), andshe deftly points to many of the strong points and weaknesses of each of the chapters within these themes.A careful reading of these concluding ... Throughout the ¤rstquarter of the twentieth century, prominent local citizens of Charleston wit-nessed the slow demise of large portions of the historic downtown area. The automobile and the creation ... Copyright © 2004 The University of Alabama Press Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487–0380All rights reservedManufactured in the United States of AmericaTypeface: Minion∞ The paper on which this...
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university alabama press ancient borinquen archaeology and ethnohistory of native puerto rico oct 2005

university alabama press ancient borinquen archaeology and ethnohistory of native puerto rico oct 2005

... for the further con¤guration of the late prehispanicsetting of the island. The issue of the ways in which these contact situations were framed is not the only aspect that has been the subject of ... have argued that these changes re®ect the development of Archaic populations on the island and the result of their interactions with the LH and the Cedrosan peoples. For them, the different manifestationswithin ... the result of the seasonal runs of crabs that tended to skew the com-position of the dietary remains in midden deposits. The fact that there were marked changes between these two series in the island...
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university of iowa press twelve millennia archaeology of the upper mississippi river valley may 2003

university of iowa press twelve millennia archaeology of the upper mississippi river valley may 2003

... evening in 1823: The flames towering above the tops of the hills and mountains, where the wind rages with most violence, gave them the appearance of volcanoes, at the moment of their most terrific ... through the presence of ar-tifacts. Even disturbances to the record of the past by natural or culturalmeans are structured and therefore knowable.Burial of the DeadThroughout the world, there ... most famous is Silver Moundat the northeast edge of the Driftless Area in Jackson County.* The othermajor source was in the central portion of the Driftless Area. There, silicifiedsandstone occurs...
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university press of colorado hunter-gatherer archaeology of the colorado high country aug 2001

university press of colorado hunter-gatherer archaeology of the colorado high country aug 2001

... the difficult task of theory building. It is growth in the latter activity and the integration of theory building into the normal activities of archaeologists that will advance the field of archaeology ... JonesHUNTER-GATHERER ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE COLORADO HIGH COUNTRY4Hunter-Gatherer Archaeology of the Colorado High Countryregarded these conclusions, and they have proceeded to interpret the archaeo-logical ... the report (Metcalf UNIVERSITY PRESS OF COLORADOMARK STIGERHUNTER-GATHERER ARCHAEOLOGY COLORADO HIGH COUNTRY OF THE xxiiiFOREWORDAs a long-time advocate of the abandonment of interpretative...
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university alabama press dialogues in cuban archaeology aug 2005

university alabama press dialogues in cuban archaeology aug 2005

... another archaeological world. Because of both the successes of the Revolution and the restrictions of the embargo, Cuban archaeology hasevolved since the 1960s largely without the involvement of ... studies of collec-tions. Many of these specialists also offered historical syntheses and interpre-tations of the communities they studied. One of the most important socialresults of Cuban archaeology ... presenting the isolation argument often ignore the historical andsociopolitical situation not only of Cuba but also of the United States and the rest of the hemisphere. At the level of international...
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university alabama press stone tool traditions in the contact era sep 2003

university alabama press stone tool traditions in the contact era sep 2003

... statements about either lack of contactor the pursuit of resistance. The lag time in the development of the Arctic allowed “mature” capitalisttactics such as the substitution of goods for wages ... lost much of its matériel after the Mabila debacle in Alabama. Even given the small sample taken from the King site, the thorough excava-tion of the site indicates that the absence of non-iron ... form of subsumed capital in that they contributed to the transferal of surplus labor in the absence of both surplus value based on wagesand restricted access to the means of production. The term...
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