The Womack site (41LR1) is an ancestral Caddo settlement situated on an alluvial terrace in a horseshoe bend of the Red River in north central Lamar County in East Texas. Harris completed the analysis and study of their 1938-mid-1960s investigations at the site, but the findings from the earlier archaeological investigations conducted at the site by the University of Texas (UT) in 1931 have not been previously published. In this article I discuss the 1931 investigations by UT at the Womack site, and also summarize the character of the artifact assemblage recovered at the site during this work. Lastly, I consider the occupational character and settlement history of the Womack site—particularly its history of settlement by ancestral Caddo peo...
This article concerns two ancestral Caddo sites in San Augustine County on tributaries to Attoyac Ba...
The W. A. Ford site (41TT2) is an ancestral Caddo cemetery on a natural sandy knoll on an alluvial t...
The T. M. Sanders site (41LR2) is one of the more important (although still not well known or intens...
The Womack site (41LR1) is an ancestral Caddo settlement situated on an alluvial terrace in a horses...
Some years ago, I commented that the upper Sabine River basin in Northeast Texas had “a highly signi...
The Hawkins site is an ancestral Caddo habitation site on a Sabine River bluff about 1.7 km southwes...
The Brooks-Lindsey site is a probable post-A.D. 1650 Caddo settlement in the Neches River basin in t...
This article concerns the documentation of the artifacts from four prehistoric Caddo sites in the Sa...
Site 41HS74 is an ancestral Caddo habitation site and cemetery on Hatley Creek, a southwardflowing t...
This article concerns the continued documentation of prehistoric and/or historic artifacts from four...
Archaeological survey investigations were conducted in 1987 and 1988 in a large tract of land along ...
Buddy C. Jones conducted extensive archaeological investigations in the 1950s and 1960s at many site...
The 13 ancestral Caddo sites and collections discussed in this article were recorded by G. E. Arnold...
The vessel collections at the Texas Archeological Research Laboratory at The University of Texas (TA...
This article discusses the character of a large assemblage of prehistoric Caddo vessel sherds from a...
This article concerns two ancestral Caddo sites in San Augustine County on tributaries to Attoyac Ba...
The W. A. Ford site (41TT2) is an ancestral Caddo cemetery on a natural sandy knoll on an alluvial t...
The T. M. Sanders site (41LR2) is one of the more important (although still not well known or intens...
The Womack site (41LR1) is an ancestral Caddo settlement situated on an alluvial terrace in a horses...
Some years ago, I commented that the upper Sabine River basin in Northeast Texas had “a highly signi...
The Hawkins site is an ancestral Caddo habitation site on a Sabine River bluff about 1.7 km southwes...
The Brooks-Lindsey site is a probable post-A.D. 1650 Caddo settlement in the Neches River basin in t...
This article concerns the documentation of the artifacts from four prehistoric Caddo sites in the Sa...
Site 41HS74 is an ancestral Caddo habitation site and cemetery on Hatley Creek, a southwardflowing t...
This article concerns the continued documentation of prehistoric and/or historic artifacts from four...
Archaeological survey investigations were conducted in 1987 and 1988 in a large tract of land along ...
Buddy C. Jones conducted extensive archaeological investigations in the 1950s and 1960s at many site...
The 13 ancestral Caddo sites and collections discussed in this article were recorded by G. E. Arnold...
The vessel collections at the Texas Archeological Research Laboratory at The University of Texas (TA...
This article discusses the character of a large assemblage of prehistoric Caddo vessel sherds from a...
This article concerns two ancestral Caddo sites in San Augustine County on tributaries to Attoyac Ba...
The W. A. Ford site (41TT2) is an ancestral Caddo cemetery on a natural sandy knoll on an alluvial t...
The T. M. Sanders site (41LR2) is one of the more important (although still not well known or intens...