Bert Salwen was a pioneer in the study of prehistoric ceramics. In this paper, we use Bert\u27s procedures of classification and interpretation to analyze the pottery assemblage from the Morgan site, a Late Woodland horticultural community located in the lower Connecticut drainage at Rocky Hill, Connecticut. The analysis provides insight into Native American cultural development in southern New England during the 12th and 14th centuries A.D. especially in the realm of social interaction and inter-regional exchange with Hudson valley groups
The archaeology of Tidewater Virginia\u27s Middle Woodland period presents an era of technological a...
Ceramic Design Elements of Massachusetts (William S. Fowler) Two Burials at Tiverton, Rhode Island (...
In the archaeological literature of southern New England, four prehistoric ceramic traditions have b...
During excavations in 1996, Dr. Tim Baumann, a professor at the University of Missouri - St. Louis, ...
Following Bert Salwen\u27s inductive approach to historical archaeology, this paper discusses the Ra...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on March 10, 2010).The entire...
A note on Bert Salwen\u27s work in historical archaeology and cultural resource management
Native Americans from the middle Connecticut River Valley of New England experienced massive social ...
Archaeology has a long history of dehumanizing the past by placing artifacts at the center of archae...
This study uses ceramic petrography to understand the meaning of “Iroquoian” ceramic traits in easte...
This research focused on understanding the production process of ceramic construction (technological...
In the northeastern United States--as elsewhere--an overemphasis on cultural-historical ceramic typo...
The ethnohistorical record indicate that during the 17th century a group of Indians, called the Nian...
Redware ceramic sherds are frequently found in New England historical archaeological sites; however,...
In the New England Maritimes region, and especially New Hampshire, small lithic sites or scatters re...
The archaeology of Tidewater Virginia\u27s Middle Woodland period presents an era of technological a...
Ceramic Design Elements of Massachusetts (William S. Fowler) Two Burials at Tiverton, Rhode Island (...
In the archaeological literature of southern New England, four prehistoric ceramic traditions have b...
During excavations in 1996, Dr. Tim Baumann, a professor at the University of Missouri - St. Louis, ...
Following Bert Salwen\u27s inductive approach to historical archaeology, this paper discusses the Ra...
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on March 10, 2010).The entire...
A note on Bert Salwen\u27s work in historical archaeology and cultural resource management
Native Americans from the middle Connecticut River Valley of New England experienced massive social ...
Archaeology has a long history of dehumanizing the past by placing artifacts at the center of archae...
This study uses ceramic petrography to understand the meaning of “Iroquoian” ceramic traits in easte...
This research focused on understanding the production process of ceramic construction (technological...
In the northeastern United States--as elsewhere--an overemphasis on cultural-historical ceramic typo...
The ethnohistorical record indicate that during the 17th century a group of Indians, called the Nian...
Redware ceramic sherds are frequently found in New England historical archaeological sites; however,...
In the New England Maritimes region, and especially New Hampshire, small lithic sites or scatters re...
The archaeology of Tidewater Virginia\u27s Middle Woodland period presents an era of technological a...
Ceramic Design Elements of Massachusetts (William S. Fowler) Two Burials at Tiverton, Rhode Island (...
In the archaeological literature of southern New England, four prehistoric ceramic traditions have b...