Nomadic Plains peoples such as the Cheyenne and Sioux have become the stereotypical image of North American Indians in general. In contrast to the hunting and gathering lifestyle of these groups, however, many Plains tribes lived in settled villages and grew extensive garden crops through much of the past millennium. These groups developed a habitation distinctly characteristic of the Plains village way of life-sturdy, earth-covered timber structures known as earth lodges. The remains of thousands of these structures dot the landscape of the Central and Northern Plains. Lodges of various forms persisted from about 1000 CE into the twentieth century. Particularly characteristic of the Pawnee, Arikara, Mandan, and Hidatsa, earthlodges were al...
Review of: Plains Indian History and Culture: Essays on Continuity and Change. Ewers, John C
Review of: Plains Indian History and Culture: Essays on Continuity and Change. Ewers, John C
Loretta Fowler, professor of anthropology at the University of Oklahoma and author of several books ...
Nomadic Plains peoples such as the Cheyenne and Sioux have become the stereotypical image of North A...
This volume, edited by Stanley A. Ahler and Marvin Kay, consists of19 contributions by 21 authors. I...
This volume, edited by Stanley A. Ahler and Marvin Kay, consists of19 contributions by 21 authors. I...
This volume emerged from the 1992 symposium Geoarchaeological Research in the Great Plains: A Histo...
This volume emerged from the 1992 symposium Geoarchaeological Research in the Great Plains: A Histo...
Plains archaeologists have long awaited a worthy successor to Waldo Wedel\u27s magisterial Prehistor...
This useful collection of review essays issues from the 34th Plains Conference, entitled Anthropolo...
This publication-based on the award-winning reinterpretation and reinstallation in 2000 of the Plain...
Plains archaeologists have long awaited a worthy successor to Waldo Wedel\u27s magisterial Prehistor...
INDIANS AND ANTHROPOLOGISTS To say that the Plains volume of the Smithsonian Institution\u27s Handbo...
The enormous increase in ethnohistorical studies over the past generation or two has made room for a...
Research concerning the Plains Village tradition in the Middle Missouri subarea has been a primary f...
Review of: Plains Indian History and Culture: Essays on Continuity and Change. Ewers, John C
Review of: Plains Indian History and Culture: Essays on Continuity and Change. Ewers, John C
Loretta Fowler, professor of anthropology at the University of Oklahoma and author of several books ...
Nomadic Plains peoples such as the Cheyenne and Sioux have become the stereotypical image of North A...
This volume, edited by Stanley A. Ahler and Marvin Kay, consists of19 contributions by 21 authors. I...
This volume, edited by Stanley A. Ahler and Marvin Kay, consists of19 contributions by 21 authors. I...
This volume emerged from the 1992 symposium Geoarchaeological Research in the Great Plains: A Histo...
This volume emerged from the 1992 symposium Geoarchaeological Research in the Great Plains: A Histo...
Plains archaeologists have long awaited a worthy successor to Waldo Wedel\u27s magisterial Prehistor...
This useful collection of review essays issues from the 34th Plains Conference, entitled Anthropolo...
This publication-based on the award-winning reinterpretation and reinstallation in 2000 of the Plain...
Plains archaeologists have long awaited a worthy successor to Waldo Wedel\u27s magisterial Prehistor...
INDIANS AND ANTHROPOLOGISTS To say that the Plains volume of the Smithsonian Institution\u27s Handbo...
The enormous increase in ethnohistorical studies over the past generation or two has made room for a...
Research concerning the Plains Village tradition in the Middle Missouri subarea has been a primary f...
Review of: Plains Indian History and Culture: Essays on Continuity and Change. Ewers, John C
Review of: Plains Indian History and Culture: Essays on Continuity and Change. Ewers, John C
Loretta Fowler, professor of anthropology at the University of Oklahoma and author of several books ...