A growing trend in Mississippian research in the archaeology of the southeastern United States stresses the need to shift away from categorizing generalizations (e.g., the concept of chiefdoms) that have been used to characterize Mississippi-period (A.D. 1000-1600) societies and advocates elucidating the unique occupational histories of Mississippian communities. This dissertation follows this trend with the goal of identifying and interpreting the particular historical and developmental trajectory of the Yon mound and village site (8Li2), a Fort Walton Mississippian site situated in the middle Apalachicola River valley, northwest Florida. Since its initial recording by Clarence Bloomfield Moore at the turn of the 20th century, Yon has been...
This dissertation reports the results of a multi-year archaeological study of Plaquemine culture in ...
Mississippian chiefdoms of the southeastern United States have commonly been characterized by the pr...
Analysis of the Mississippian component features from the Eoff I site in the Normandy Reservoir, upp...
A growing trend in Mississippian research in the archaeology of the southeastern United States stres...
University of South Florida field investigations in northwest Florida’s Apalachicola Valley have res...
A thorough literature review was completed in order to construct a database of all the known Middle ...
The objective of my research was to compile all known burial data from the Fort Walton culture locat...
Southeastern archaeologists have long recognized the attractiveness of the Fall Line zone to Mississ...
410 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1992.This study makes use of archa...
This dissertation examines the archaeology of Parchman Place (22CO511), a late Mississippi period (A...
Fort Walton, the local variant of Mississippian culture in northwest Florida, has long been studied ...
The dawn of the eighteenth century in the Apalachicola delta region of the Florida panhandle was a t...
This research describes a large, newly-recorded archaeological site in the Upper Apalachicola River ...
The long process of Mississippianization (AD 900 – 1500) across the midwestern and southeastern Unit...
Through an interregional analysis of multiple archaeological patterns, this dissertation evaluates h...
This dissertation reports the results of a multi-year archaeological study of Plaquemine culture in ...
Mississippian chiefdoms of the southeastern United States have commonly been characterized by the pr...
Analysis of the Mississippian component features from the Eoff I site in the Normandy Reservoir, upp...
A growing trend in Mississippian research in the archaeology of the southeastern United States stres...
University of South Florida field investigations in northwest Florida’s Apalachicola Valley have res...
A thorough literature review was completed in order to construct a database of all the known Middle ...
The objective of my research was to compile all known burial data from the Fort Walton culture locat...
Southeastern archaeologists have long recognized the attractiveness of the Fall Line zone to Mississ...
410 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 1992.This study makes use of archa...
This dissertation examines the archaeology of Parchman Place (22CO511), a late Mississippi period (A...
Fort Walton, the local variant of Mississippian culture in northwest Florida, has long been studied ...
The dawn of the eighteenth century in the Apalachicola delta region of the Florida panhandle was a t...
This research describes a large, newly-recorded archaeological site in the Upper Apalachicola River ...
The long process of Mississippianization (AD 900 – 1500) across the midwestern and southeastern Unit...
Through an interregional analysis of multiple archaeological patterns, this dissertation evaluates h...
This dissertation reports the results of a multi-year archaeological study of Plaquemine culture in ...
Mississippian chiefdoms of the southeastern United States have commonly been characterized by the pr...
Analysis of the Mississippian component features from the Eoff I site in the Normandy Reservoir, upp...