Glass trade beads were commonly used by Europeans to win Native friendship and to trade for various articles. At Fort Niagara in Western New York, glass and wampum trad
Color poster with text, figures, photographs, charts, and graphs.We present preliminary results on t...
Over the past few decades, several new analytical techniques have been used to determine the composi...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...
An assemblage of 445 archaeological glass trade beads excavated from Old Fort Niagara, Youngstown, N...
The Sullivans Island glass bead collection at the Smithsonian\u27s National Museum of Natural Histor...
One of the earliest French attempts at settlement in northeastern North America occurred on a small ...
While countless tons of European glass beads flowed into West Africa over the centuries, there is st...
Early glass beads acquired by the Mohawk Indians of New York state were a mixture of whatever was ma...
Although European-made glass trade beads can be sorted into bead varieties and studied in that manne...
To the 16th-century Iroquois living in what is now central New York state, European glass trade bead...
In 2 vols.SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN025051 / BLDSC - British...
Dating from the 16th to 18th centuries, 63 glass artifacts (mostly beads) recovered from two sites i...
This study investigates various glass objects from the 17th and 18th centuries in Thuringia to gain ...
Glass trade beads were common items of the historical North American fur trade. This paper foc...
Glass beads form a large part of archaeological evidence attesting to Indian Ocean trade with easter...
Color poster with text, figures, photographs, charts, and graphs.We present preliminary results on t...
Over the past few decades, several new analytical techniques have been used to determine the composi...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...
An assemblage of 445 archaeological glass trade beads excavated from Old Fort Niagara, Youngstown, N...
The Sullivans Island glass bead collection at the Smithsonian\u27s National Museum of Natural Histor...
One of the earliest French attempts at settlement in northeastern North America occurred on a small ...
While countless tons of European glass beads flowed into West Africa over the centuries, there is st...
Early glass beads acquired by the Mohawk Indians of New York state were a mixture of whatever was ma...
Although European-made glass trade beads can be sorted into bead varieties and studied in that manne...
To the 16th-century Iroquois living in what is now central New York state, European glass trade bead...
In 2 vols.SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:DXN025051 / BLDSC - British...
Dating from the 16th to 18th centuries, 63 glass artifacts (mostly beads) recovered from two sites i...
This study investigates various glass objects from the 17th and 18th centuries in Thuringia to gain ...
Glass trade beads were common items of the historical North American fur trade. This paper foc...
Glass beads form a large part of archaeological evidence attesting to Indian Ocean trade with easter...
Color poster with text, figures, photographs, charts, and graphs.We present preliminary results on t...
Over the past few decades, several new analytical techniques have been used to determine the composi...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...