A wealth of strikingly unusual and beautiful objects of Indian manufacture were excavated from the burials of the Spiro Mound, Leflore (sic.) County, Oklahoma during 1936-37. Engraved Gulf Coast conch shells, shell beads of a dozen types, river pearls, effigy pipes, long delicately chipped flint blades, feather and textile cloths and precisely incised pottery vessels were excavated in quantities. So unusual was this material that, at the time, the archaeological science was unable to answer a host of questions which immediately arose concerning the identity of the tribe who had made the artifacts and who were buried with them. How long ago had they occupied the region? From where had they come, and where did they go? The chronological relat...
Sherds from aboriginally-made ceramic vessels have been recovered on sites dating after ca. 2000 yea...
The Formative Caddo Period (A.D. 850-1100) of eastern Oklahoma was marked by dramatic material and r...
The Three Mounds Creek site is an ancestral Caddo multiple mound center along a southern-flowing tri...
The Mode site is an extensive village site on the banks of Grand River. Only a small portion of the ...
In January and February of 1997, the Oklahoma Department of Transportation (ODOT) conducted archaeol...
Cherokee County is the latest in the state to have its prehistoric conditions investigated by the De...
The main aim of the paper is the comparison of two archaeological sites, (1) the Eufaula site of McI...
In 1931, twenty-one graves at an obscure site on the edge of the Eastern Woodlands yielded an astoni...
As part of a WPA-funded project, Gus E. Arnold of the University of Texas carried out archaeological...
Rarely do prehistoric archeologists in North America have the opportunity to completely excavate and...
This large artificial mound is known as Site ET-30, A.J. Hatchel place [41BW3], Bowie County. The mo...
Burned rock mounds haven been identified in Oklahoma since the early twentieth century. The Oklahoma...
Although a considerable body of historic archival and documentary information is available on the Ca...
In the last few years, we have had the opportunity to study a number of prehistoric Caddo Indian sit...
Aboriginal ceramic sherds from three sites (41MA27, 41MA29, and 41MA30) in the Navasota River basin ...
Sherds from aboriginally-made ceramic vessels have been recovered on sites dating after ca. 2000 yea...
The Formative Caddo Period (A.D. 850-1100) of eastern Oklahoma was marked by dramatic material and r...
The Three Mounds Creek site is an ancestral Caddo multiple mound center along a southern-flowing tri...
The Mode site is an extensive village site on the banks of Grand River. Only a small portion of the ...
In January and February of 1997, the Oklahoma Department of Transportation (ODOT) conducted archaeol...
Cherokee County is the latest in the state to have its prehistoric conditions investigated by the De...
The main aim of the paper is the comparison of two archaeological sites, (1) the Eufaula site of McI...
In 1931, twenty-one graves at an obscure site on the edge of the Eastern Woodlands yielded an astoni...
As part of a WPA-funded project, Gus E. Arnold of the University of Texas carried out archaeological...
Rarely do prehistoric archeologists in North America have the opportunity to completely excavate and...
This large artificial mound is known as Site ET-30, A.J. Hatchel place [41BW3], Bowie County. The mo...
Burned rock mounds haven been identified in Oklahoma since the early twentieth century. The Oklahoma...
Although a considerable body of historic archival and documentary information is available on the Ca...
In the last few years, we have had the opportunity to study a number of prehistoric Caddo Indian sit...
Aboriginal ceramic sherds from three sites (41MA27, 41MA29, and 41MA30) in the Navasota River basin ...
Sherds from aboriginally-made ceramic vessels have been recovered on sites dating after ca. 2000 yea...
The Formative Caddo Period (A.D. 850-1100) of eastern Oklahoma was marked by dramatic material and r...
The Three Mounds Creek site is an ancestral Caddo multiple mound center along a southern-flowing tri...