Beads fashioned from the stems of clay tobacco pipes have been found at a number of archaeological sites, principally in the Northeast. This practice appears to have begun in the early 17th century and continued until at least the beginning of the 19th century. Although stem fragments are ideally suited for stringing and have the appearance of tubular shell beads, beads fashioned from them are relatively scarce, possibly because researchers do not recognize them. To qualify as a bead, a pipe stem must exhibit clear evidence of intentional modification of the ends and/or show use wear at the extremities. Surface alteration not related to smoking is another indicator
There are currently three formula dating techniques available to archaeologists studying 17th and 18...
Loaded with 200 tons of goods heading for Omaha, Nebraska, and Sioux City and Council Bluffs, Iowa, ...
Recent excavations conducted on historic Creek Indian components at the Tarver (9JO6) and Little Tar...
In 17th-century England, the village of Norton St Philip was well known as a center for the manufact...
The examination and analysis of the kaolin clay pipe collection from Port Royal, Jamaica, revealed s...
Excavations at historic sites often result in the recovery of an abundance of white clay tobacco pip...
Four years of excavations at the multi-component Ballynacree site (DkKp-8), located at the mouth of ...
To the 16th-century Iroquois living in what is now central New York state, European glass trade bead...
During the 17th and 18th centuries, Native Americans rarely adorned ceramic objects with glass beads...
Beads of copper are amongst the oldest and most widespread ornament forms known in North America. Na...
A fragmentary green-glazed redware tobacco pipe is illustrated from the Cupp Site (33-Fa-1411), Fair...
Clay tobacco-pipe studies played an important, yet unacknowledged, role in the formation process of ...
Excavations in 2001 and 2005 at Hammersmith Embankment in West London uncovered the remains of two g...
A variety of glass beads were encountered in jar burials dating to the 15th-17th centuries found on ...
Burials excavated on the north coast of Peru were associated with 16th-century European glass beads ...
There are currently three formula dating techniques available to archaeologists studying 17th and 18...
Loaded with 200 tons of goods heading for Omaha, Nebraska, and Sioux City and Council Bluffs, Iowa, ...
Recent excavations conducted on historic Creek Indian components at the Tarver (9JO6) and Little Tar...
In 17th-century England, the village of Norton St Philip was well known as a center for the manufact...
The examination and analysis of the kaolin clay pipe collection from Port Royal, Jamaica, revealed s...
Excavations at historic sites often result in the recovery of an abundance of white clay tobacco pip...
Four years of excavations at the multi-component Ballynacree site (DkKp-8), located at the mouth of ...
To the 16th-century Iroquois living in what is now central New York state, European glass trade bead...
During the 17th and 18th centuries, Native Americans rarely adorned ceramic objects with glass beads...
Beads of copper are amongst the oldest and most widespread ornament forms known in North America. Na...
A fragmentary green-glazed redware tobacco pipe is illustrated from the Cupp Site (33-Fa-1411), Fair...
Clay tobacco-pipe studies played an important, yet unacknowledged, role in the formation process of ...
Excavations in 2001 and 2005 at Hammersmith Embankment in West London uncovered the remains of two g...
A variety of glass beads were encountered in jar burials dating to the 15th-17th centuries found on ...
Burials excavated on the north coast of Peru were associated with 16th-century European glass beads ...
There are currently three formula dating techniques available to archaeologists studying 17th and 18...
Loaded with 200 tons of goods heading for Omaha, Nebraska, and Sioux City and Council Bluffs, Iowa, ...
Recent excavations conducted on historic Creek Indian components at the Tarver (9JO6) and Little Tar...