The unique and memorable design of man-in-the-moon beads has intrigued researchers over the years. These distinctive beads were identified in the 1960s by George Quimby as being chronologically diagnostic of Middle Historic Period sites (1670-1760) in the western Great Lakes region. The present study more clearly defines both the temporal and geographical instances of man-in-the-moon beads while taking into account possible cultural and historical implications. This project has led to the compilation of information regarding many specimens previously unknown to most researchers
Ancient glass beads as a window to the ancient world Glass beads, both beautiful and portable, ha...
Over the past few decades, several new analytical techniques have been used to determine the composi...
The purchase of Manhattan Island is an unrecorded event dressed in mystery and myth. An examination ...
Circular or Half-Moon Marks on Old Beads, by Alison Kyra Carter. • Two Unusual Drawn-Glass Bead Var...
The year 2006 marks the 80th anniversary of the presentation of a Classification and Nomenclature o...
During the 19th and 20th centuries, Gablonz in northern Bohemia (now Jablonec nad Nisou in the Czech...
During the 17th and 18th centuries, Native Americans rarely adorned ceramic objects with glass beads...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...
An ancient bead is a document from the past—a message in a bottle—written in some lost symbolic lang...
Beads and similar ornaments appear early in the archaeological record associated with modern humans ...
A variety of glass beads were encountered in jar burials dating to the 15th-17th centuries found on ...
The sources of trade beads found in archeological sites in North American may be discovered through ...
Loaded with 200 tons of goods heading for Omaha, Nebraska, and Sioux City and Council Bluffs, Iowa, ...
Thirty years have passed since the late Richard G. Conn presented this paper at the conference of th...
To the 16th-century Iroquois living in what is now central New York state, European glass trade bead...
Ancient glass beads as a window to the ancient world Glass beads, both beautiful and portable, ha...
Over the past few decades, several new analytical techniques have been used to determine the composi...
The purchase of Manhattan Island is an unrecorded event dressed in mystery and myth. An examination ...
Circular or Half-Moon Marks on Old Beads, by Alison Kyra Carter. • Two Unusual Drawn-Glass Bead Var...
The year 2006 marks the 80th anniversary of the presentation of a Classification and Nomenclature o...
During the 19th and 20th centuries, Gablonz in northern Bohemia (now Jablonec nad Nisou in the Czech...
During the 17th and 18th centuries, Native Americans rarely adorned ceramic objects with glass beads...
Situated in the southwestern region of the Crimea, the Belbek IV cemetery was utilized for much of t...
An ancient bead is a document from the past—a message in a bottle—written in some lost symbolic lang...
Beads and similar ornaments appear early in the archaeological record associated with modern humans ...
A variety of glass beads were encountered in jar burials dating to the 15th-17th centuries found on ...
The sources of trade beads found in archeological sites in North American may be discovered through ...
Loaded with 200 tons of goods heading for Omaha, Nebraska, and Sioux City and Council Bluffs, Iowa, ...
Thirty years have passed since the late Richard G. Conn presented this paper at the conference of th...
To the 16th-century Iroquois living in what is now central New York state, European glass trade bead...
Ancient glass beads as a window to the ancient world Glass beads, both beautiful and portable, ha...
Over the past few decades, several new analytical techniques have been used to determine the composi...
The purchase of Manhattan Island is an unrecorded event dressed in mystery and myth. An examination ...