Colonoware vessels and vessel fragments have been recovered from numerous colonial and antebellum sites in Virginia, and the number of newly reported sites increases with each excavation season. What this growing corpus of Virginia colonoware presently requires, however, is an adequate, standardized typology for pottery classification, at both site-specific and regional scales. Here, the colonoware typology designed during analysis of collections from the Barnes Plantation (44FX1326), a mid-18th century tobacco plantation in Fairfax County, Virginia, is explained and offered for use elsewhere. Colonware sherds from contemporaneous northern Virginia plantation sites exhibit many of the same charcteristics as those found at the Barnes site, a...
Colonoware, a broad category of low-fired, handbuilt ceramics representing Native American, African ...
The estuarine Nansemond River in southeastern Virginia provided exploitable resources to Indians and...
Two archaeological features, N26 and N29, at Brunswick Town/Fort Anderson State Historic Site were o...
Colonoware is a low fired pottery tradition concentrated in the southeastern United States. It has b...
The Digging Savannah public archaeology initiative has been assisting Telfair Museums with salvage e...
The Digging Savannah public archaeology initiative has been assisting Telfair Museums with salvage e...
The definition of what constitutes a Virginia slave quarter based on archaeological evidence is evol...
Chiefdoms located on the frontier of the Mississippian world have not been examined in great detail,...
This unpublished symposium paper presents ideas on possible uses of colonoware inspired by ethnoarch...
Manassas National Battlefield Park in Manassas, Virginia has very limited information regarding the ...
Initial investigations, consisting of a reconnaissance level study, were conducted in 1994 (Adams an...
The archaeology of Tidewater Virginia\u27s Middle Woodland period presents an era of technological a...
The Oval Site (44WM80) is located on the grounds of Stratford Hall Plantation in Westmoreland County...
In January and February, 1992, the William and Mary Center for Archaeological Research (WMCAR) condu...
Despite close to a century\u27s worth of archaeological investigations at Jamestown, the first perma...
Colonoware, a broad category of low-fired, handbuilt ceramics representing Native American, African ...
The estuarine Nansemond River in southeastern Virginia provided exploitable resources to Indians and...
Two archaeological features, N26 and N29, at Brunswick Town/Fort Anderson State Historic Site were o...
Colonoware is a low fired pottery tradition concentrated in the southeastern United States. It has b...
The Digging Savannah public archaeology initiative has been assisting Telfair Museums with salvage e...
The Digging Savannah public archaeology initiative has been assisting Telfair Museums with salvage e...
The definition of what constitutes a Virginia slave quarter based on archaeological evidence is evol...
Chiefdoms located on the frontier of the Mississippian world have not been examined in great detail,...
This unpublished symposium paper presents ideas on possible uses of colonoware inspired by ethnoarch...
Manassas National Battlefield Park in Manassas, Virginia has very limited information regarding the ...
Initial investigations, consisting of a reconnaissance level study, were conducted in 1994 (Adams an...
The archaeology of Tidewater Virginia\u27s Middle Woodland period presents an era of technological a...
The Oval Site (44WM80) is located on the grounds of Stratford Hall Plantation in Westmoreland County...
In January and February, 1992, the William and Mary Center for Archaeological Research (WMCAR) condu...
Despite close to a century\u27s worth of archaeological investigations at Jamestown, the first perma...
Colonoware, a broad category of low-fired, handbuilt ceramics representing Native American, African ...
The estuarine Nansemond River in southeastern Virginia provided exploitable resources to Indians and...
Two archaeological features, N26 and N29, at Brunswick Town/Fort Anderson State Historic Site were o...