Analysis of the Mississippian component features from the Eoff I site in the Normandy Reservoir, upper Duck River, Coffee County, Tennessee, has indicated that the component represents an Early ,Mississippian Banks phase occupation dating from between A.D. 1068 and A.D. 1170. The spatial distribution of features at the site along with the artifactual content of these features suggests that a major cluster of features was placed in consistent arrangement with each of two semisubterranean structures. A storage zone is possibly indicated by a cluster of features with morphological characteristics usually associated with storage facilities and also by the significantly larger ceramic vessels found within this cluster. The variety of artifactual...
This thesis reports the results of two years of archaeological research on the Middle Flint River in...
Investigations at Chucalissa (40SY1) in Shelby County, Tennessee, have been instrumental in establis...
The Mississippian Period lasted from approximately 1000 to 1550 CE and occurred in the regions of th...
Analysis of the Mississippian component features from the Eoff I site in the Normandy Reservoir, upp...
The faunal remains from the Mississippian components on three archaeological sites (40CF111, 40CF32,...
Until recently, very little attention has been paid to the protohistoric time period in the state of...
Southeastern archaeologists have long recognized the attractiveness of the Fall Line zone to Mississ...
The goal of this study is the examination of the temporal variability between the Mississippian I an...
Ames (40FY7) is an Early-Middle Mississippian period town (A.D. 1050-1300) with two dozen structures...
A growing trend in Mississippian research in the archaeology of the southeastern United States stres...
Household Versus Workshop: Lithic Analysis of a Middle Mississippian Site The Mississippian Period r...
Secondary archaeological testing was undertaken by the Jeffrey L. Brown Institute of Archaeology, Un...
The Austin Site (22TU549) is a known transitional Late Woodland to early Mississippian village locat...
Middle Mississippian is a both a cultural and temporal (1200 CE–1400 CE) archaeological context of M...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [138]-149)The Mississippian period in the Southeastern Un...
This thesis reports the results of two years of archaeological research on the Middle Flint River in...
Investigations at Chucalissa (40SY1) in Shelby County, Tennessee, have been instrumental in establis...
The Mississippian Period lasted from approximately 1000 to 1550 CE and occurred in the regions of th...
Analysis of the Mississippian component features from the Eoff I site in the Normandy Reservoir, upp...
The faunal remains from the Mississippian components on three archaeological sites (40CF111, 40CF32,...
Until recently, very little attention has been paid to the protohistoric time period in the state of...
Southeastern archaeologists have long recognized the attractiveness of the Fall Line zone to Mississ...
The goal of this study is the examination of the temporal variability between the Mississippian I an...
Ames (40FY7) is an Early-Middle Mississippian period town (A.D. 1050-1300) with two dozen structures...
A growing trend in Mississippian research in the archaeology of the southeastern United States stres...
Household Versus Workshop: Lithic Analysis of a Middle Mississippian Site The Mississippian Period r...
Secondary archaeological testing was undertaken by the Jeffrey L. Brown Institute of Archaeology, Un...
The Austin Site (22TU549) is a known transitional Late Woodland to early Mississippian village locat...
Middle Mississippian is a both a cultural and temporal (1200 CE–1400 CE) archaeological context of M...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [138]-149)The Mississippian period in the Southeastern Un...
This thesis reports the results of two years of archaeological research on the Middle Flint River in...
Investigations at Chucalissa (40SY1) in Shelby County, Tennessee, have been instrumental in establis...
The Mississippian Period lasted from approximately 1000 to 1550 CE and occurred in the regions of th...