A multi-method approach including ground-penetrating radar, magnetometry, historical research, excavations, and artifact analyses was used to gather data at a 17th century archaeological site in South Glastonbury, Connecticut. Interpretation of these data provided evidence that the Europeans who occupied this site were involved in a variety of activities such as agriculture, trade, and developing Indigenous relationships. These activities included cultivating an agricultural surplus instead of relying on subsistence farming, access to trading networks that extended throughout the Colonies and into Europe, and cohabitation with the Indigenous peoples in the area. This research led to an examination of various historical narratives on early C...
Results of excavations conducted between 1986 and 1994 at the Spencer-Pierce-Little farm, Newbury, M...
During the late eighteenth century, Catawba Indians in South Carolina experienced dramatic populatio...
This thesis studies the rise, maintenance, and decline of New England praying towns from 1643-1675. ...
A multi-method approach including ground-penetrating radar, magnetometry, historical research, excav...
The focus of this research is the ways in which interactions between Indigenous peoples and English ...
The primary goal of this dissertation is to explore the nature of cultural change and continuity dur...
While American historical archaeologists have made significant progress in their investigations of e...
The Smith\u27s Point site was a seasonally inhabited Native American encampment in Yarmouth, Massach...
This study explores how illicit transatlantic trade relations with the Dutch in seventeenth-century ...
This thesis examines the connection between town planning and social organization at the small town ...
Changes in the landscape across the Barrett farmstead in Concord, Massachusetts, are examined and re...
This research furthers our understanding of colonial-Native relations by identifying and analyzing a...
This dissertation presents the results of a comparative study of English colonial-period fisheries s...
Though there is no shortage of 17th century plantation sites in the Chesapeake archaeology enslaved ...
This thesis seeks to further understanding of early colonial life within New England through an exam...
Results of excavations conducted between 1986 and 1994 at the Spencer-Pierce-Little farm, Newbury, M...
During the late eighteenth century, Catawba Indians in South Carolina experienced dramatic populatio...
This thesis studies the rise, maintenance, and decline of New England praying towns from 1643-1675. ...
A multi-method approach including ground-penetrating radar, magnetometry, historical research, excav...
The focus of this research is the ways in which interactions between Indigenous peoples and English ...
The primary goal of this dissertation is to explore the nature of cultural change and continuity dur...
While American historical archaeologists have made significant progress in their investigations of e...
The Smith\u27s Point site was a seasonally inhabited Native American encampment in Yarmouth, Massach...
This study explores how illicit transatlantic trade relations with the Dutch in seventeenth-century ...
This thesis examines the connection between town planning and social organization at the small town ...
Changes in the landscape across the Barrett farmstead in Concord, Massachusetts, are examined and re...
This research furthers our understanding of colonial-Native relations by identifying and analyzing a...
This dissertation presents the results of a comparative study of English colonial-period fisheries s...
Though there is no shortage of 17th century plantation sites in the Chesapeake archaeology enslaved ...
This thesis seeks to further understanding of early colonial life within New England through an exam...
Results of excavations conducted between 1986 and 1994 at the Spencer-Pierce-Little farm, Newbury, M...
During the late eighteenth century, Catawba Indians in South Carolina experienced dramatic populatio...
This thesis studies the rise, maintenance, and decline of New England praying towns from 1643-1675. ...