A worked (cut and drilled) beak and mandible from a Sandhill Crane (Grus canadensis tabida) are described from a refuse pit excavated at the Late Prehistoric Richards Site, Muskingum Co., Ohio. This is the first record of the bird in Muskingum Co. and only the fourth prehistoric record for the species in Ohio. Other bone artifacts found in the refuse pit include a drilled elk phalange, an antler tine with chisel edge, a bird bone bead, and a bipointed pin or awl. These are also illustrated
While engaged in the reorganization of the vertebrate fossil collections at the Peabody Museum of Na...
Although the spring concentrations of Sandhill Cranes in Nebraska\u27s Platte Valley are now an avia...
Awls are a relatively common artifact at ancient Mississippian sites like Chucalissa, but most of th...
A worked (cut and drilled) beak and mandible from a Sandhill Crane (Grus canadensis tabida) are desc...
The poor preservation that often characterizes archaeology in the Northeast demands that the formati...
The Mississippi sandhill crane (Grus canadensis pulla) is an endangered, nonmigratory subspecies of ...
This pipe in effigy (a likeness or representation) of a sandhill crane was excavated from Tremper Mo...
On 30 March 1996 around 1000 h CST, Bob Janssen and Jim Williams of Minnetonka, Minnesota, discovere...
Prior to extirpation as a breeder before 1 900, the Sandhill Crane (Grus canadensis) formerly bred t...
Fragment of a slate pop-eye type birdstone is the head portion of a stylized bird form. The beak is ...
Historically, the sandhill crane (Grus canadensis) was considered a common migrant throughout Indian...
Author Institution: The Ohio Historical Society: The American Museum of Natural Histor
Birds is the first book to examine bird remains in archaeology and anthropology. Providing a thoroug...
In 1982, 2 eggs from an abandoned greater sandhill crane (Grus canadensis tabida) nest were artifici...
This pipe in effigy (a likeness or representation) of a falcon was excavated from Tremper Mound, a H...
While engaged in the reorganization of the vertebrate fossil collections at the Peabody Museum of Na...
Although the spring concentrations of Sandhill Cranes in Nebraska\u27s Platte Valley are now an avia...
Awls are a relatively common artifact at ancient Mississippian sites like Chucalissa, but most of th...
A worked (cut and drilled) beak and mandible from a Sandhill Crane (Grus canadensis tabida) are desc...
The poor preservation that often characterizes archaeology in the Northeast demands that the formati...
The Mississippi sandhill crane (Grus canadensis pulla) is an endangered, nonmigratory subspecies of ...
This pipe in effigy (a likeness or representation) of a sandhill crane was excavated from Tremper Mo...
On 30 March 1996 around 1000 h CST, Bob Janssen and Jim Williams of Minnetonka, Minnesota, discovere...
Prior to extirpation as a breeder before 1 900, the Sandhill Crane (Grus canadensis) formerly bred t...
Fragment of a slate pop-eye type birdstone is the head portion of a stylized bird form. The beak is ...
Historically, the sandhill crane (Grus canadensis) was considered a common migrant throughout Indian...
Author Institution: The Ohio Historical Society: The American Museum of Natural Histor
Birds is the first book to examine bird remains in archaeology and anthropology. Providing a thoroug...
In 1982, 2 eggs from an abandoned greater sandhill crane (Grus canadensis tabida) nest were artifici...
This pipe in effigy (a likeness or representation) of a falcon was excavated from Tremper Mound, a H...
While engaged in the reorganization of the vertebrate fossil collections at the Peabody Museum of Na...
Although the spring concentrations of Sandhill Cranes in Nebraska\u27s Platte Valley are now an avia...
Awls are a relatively common artifact at ancient Mississippian sites like Chucalissa, but most of th...