The research undertaken in this dissertation was designed to explore how the institutionalized social inequalities in prehistoric Woodland society are reflected in the differences in the procurement, in the life history, and the final discard locations of the flaked chert stone tools from the Crystal River site (8CI1). The Woodland period (1000 BC to AD 1000) was a time of both stability and change in Native American society. Many of the core institutions such as subsistence, hunting and ceramic technology, and residence remained relatively constant while religious and political institutions underwent dramatic changes. This study focuses on how these social inequalities were manifested in the chipped stone tool assemblage from this site. Th...
This study aims to identify technological practices of Native American people who lived at the Kimbl...
This project analyzed use wear on 100 artifacts recovered from two Late Archaic sites located on Gra...
This research explores how daily practices shape community organization and contribute to regional h...
The research undertaken in this dissertation was designed to explore how the institutionalized socia...
This project evaluated a 90 acre parcel of property located on the southern shore of Orange Lake in ...
Site 8HG1312, also known as “Amanda’s Terrace,” is a multi-occupational hunter-gather site in the Ce...
The Woodland-period (ca. 1000 B.C. to A.D. 1050) fisher-hunter-gatherers of the Crystal River draina...
The Chipola River Valley in northwest Florida is an area of extensive occupation by pre-contact peop...
With this thesis, I aim to fill a gap in our knowledge of shell artifacts from the northwest part of...
The Archaic to Woodland transition in the North American Southeast (about 3000-2500 BCE) was a time ...
Toolstone use in the Ozark Mountains is a reactionary process reliant on how the landscape provides ...
The examination of the tools that prehistoric people crafted for subsistence and related practices o...
The Crystal River site (8CI1) is a Woodland-period mound (ca. 1000 BC to AD 1050) complex located on...
The examination of the tools that prehistoric people crafted for subsistence and related practices o...
This project documents and analyzes a substantial private collection of artifacts from archaeologica...
This study aims to identify technological practices of Native American people who lived at the Kimbl...
This project analyzed use wear on 100 artifacts recovered from two Late Archaic sites located on Gra...
This research explores how daily practices shape community organization and contribute to regional h...
The research undertaken in this dissertation was designed to explore how the institutionalized socia...
This project evaluated a 90 acre parcel of property located on the southern shore of Orange Lake in ...
Site 8HG1312, also known as “Amanda’s Terrace,” is a multi-occupational hunter-gather site in the Ce...
The Woodland-period (ca. 1000 B.C. to A.D. 1050) fisher-hunter-gatherers of the Crystal River draina...
The Chipola River Valley in northwest Florida is an area of extensive occupation by pre-contact peop...
With this thesis, I aim to fill a gap in our knowledge of shell artifacts from the northwest part of...
The Archaic to Woodland transition in the North American Southeast (about 3000-2500 BCE) was a time ...
Toolstone use in the Ozark Mountains is a reactionary process reliant on how the landscape provides ...
The examination of the tools that prehistoric people crafted for subsistence and related practices o...
The Crystal River site (8CI1) is a Woodland-period mound (ca. 1000 BC to AD 1050) complex located on...
The examination of the tools that prehistoric people crafted for subsistence and related practices o...
This project documents and analyzes a substantial private collection of artifacts from archaeologica...
This study aims to identify technological practices of Native American people who lived at the Kimbl...
This project analyzed use wear on 100 artifacts recovered from two Late Archaic sites located on Gra...
This research explores how daily practices shape community organization and contribute to regional h...