Pottery classified as “Coles Creek Incised” is common both to the earliest Caddo sites along the Red River and to contemporary sites in the Lower Mississippi Valley. Although it often is suggested that Coles Creek pottery from the two regions can be distinguished by differences in paste, no detailed comparative studies have been carried out. An initial attempt to identify variation through the use of petrographic analysis was carried out by comparing 50 samples drawn from sites in northwest and central Louisiana. Although no sharp dichotomy was noted between the regions, the study identified distinctions that support the notion that most Coles Creek pottery was made locally and different technological traditions may be represented
Much of the decorated utility wares found in Titus phase mortuary vessel assemblages in the Big Cypr...
The importance of the use of a Geographic Information System (GIS) in archaeological applications ha...
Between December 1941 and March 1942, the final federally-sponsored WPA excavations in Oklahoma were...
There we were, sailing south along the California coastline at the very top of Princess Lines\u27s L...
When French explorers first arrived in northwest Louisiana, the local Caddo Indians had already earn...
Vere L. Huddleston was one of several amateur archaeologists who excavated Caddo sites in Clark Coun...
The Caddo salt makers at the Drake’s Salt Works Site Complex in northwestern Louisiana played a crit...
Todd presented a general chronology for the presence of aboriginal-manufactured clay elbow pipes in ...
The pursuit of Caddo archaeological research over the last 100+ years has led to considerable gains ...
This paper examines the Arkansas River Caddoan cultural landscape through use of “architectural gram...
In the early months of 1916, Mark R. Harrington, under the auspices of the Museum of the American In...
As part of on-going documentation of the Joint Educational Consortium’s Hodges Collection, 31 cerami...
Barbra ‘Barb’ Wood is 63 years old and lives in Portland M.E with her partner Carol. Barb realized s...
Many reviews were published these last years about the photovoltaic development. It also reflects th...
The Caddo Indians practiced a vibrant peyote religion long before John Wilson (Moonhead) or Quanah P...
Much of the decorated utility wares found in Titus phase mortuary vessel assemblages in the Big Cypr...
The importance of the use of a Geographic Information System (GIS) in archaeological applications ha...
Between December 1941 and March 1942, the final federally-sponsored WPA excavations in Oklahoma were...
There we were, sailing south along the California coastline at the very top of Princess Lines\u27s L...
When French explorers first arrived in northwest Louisiana, the local Caddo Indians had already earn...
Vere L. Huddleston was one of several amateur archaeologists who excavated Caddo sites in Clark Coun...
The Caddo salt makers at the Drake’s Salt Works Site Complex in northwestern Louisiana played a crit...
Todd presented a general chronology for the presence of aboriginal-manufactured clay elbow pipes in ...
The pursuit of Caddo archaeological research over the last 100+ years has led to considerable gains ...
This paper examines the Arkansas River Caddoan cultural landscape through use of “architectural gram...
In the early months of 1916, Mark R. Harrington, under the auspices of the Museum of the American In...
As part of on-going documentation of the Joint Educational Consortium’s Hodges Collection, 31 cerami...
Barbra ‘Barb’ Wood is 63 years old and lives in Portland M.E with her partner Carol. Barb realized s...
Many reviews were published these last years about the photovoltaic development. It also reflects th...
The Caddo Indians practiced a vibrant peyote religion long before John Wilson (Moonhead) or Quanah P...
Much of the decorated utility wares found in Titus phase mortuary vessel assemblages in the Big Cypr...
The importance of the use of a Geographic Information System (GIS) in archaeological applications ha...
Between December 1941 and March 1942, the final federally-sponsored WPA excavations in Oklahoma were...