University of South Florida field investigations in northwest Florida’s Apalachicola Valley have resulted in the relocation of some lost mounds from the Middle Woodland period (ca. A.D. 1 to 650) by trekking through the forest and consulting with avocationals and collectors. This thesis project was triggered by a collector’s donation of some Swift Creek pots and the attempt to relocate the mound from which they came. In the 1970s, Gardner and Nidy recorded this site, named Poplar Springs Mound, categorized as Middle Woodland due to its Swift Creek and Weeden Island pottery. The donated collection contained pottery of the Swift Creek Complicated-Stamped series, Weeden Island series, and a couple of anomalous Mississippian sherds. To see how ...
The Woodland period (1000 BC – AD 1000) in the Southeastern US is characterized by sedentary horticu...
The objective of my research was to compile all known burial data from the Fort Walton culture locat...
During the Middle Woodland Period (300 BC – AD 600), ceremonial centers began to rise throughout the...
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 ...
This thesis should serve as a comprehensive site report for both Porter’s Bar (8Fr1) and Green Point...
A growing trend in Mississippian research in the archaeology of the southeastern United States stres...
Fort Walton, the local variant of Mississippian culture in northwest Florida, has long been studied ...
This research describes a large, newly-recorded archaeological site in the Upper Apalachicola River ...
This research compares prehistoric check-stamped ceramics from two northwest Florida sites, Sunstrok...
With this thesis, I aim to fill a gap in our knowledge of shell artifacts from the northwest part of...
This research examines and compares the distributions of archaeological sites and materials in order...
Archaeological reconnaissance in portions of Dixie County and selected adjacent sections of Taylor a...
The Woodland period (1000 BC – AD 1000) in the Southeastern US is characterized by sedentary horticu...
The objective of my research was to compile all known burial data from the Fort Walton culture locat...
During the Middle Woodland Period (300 BC – AD 600), ceremonial centers began to rise throughout the...
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 ...
This thesis should serve as a comprehensive site report for both Porter’s Bar (8Fr1) and Green Point...
A growing trend in Mississippian research in the archaeology of the southeastern United States stres...
Fort Walton, the local variant of Mississippian culture in northwest Florida, has long been studied ...
This research describes a large, newly-recorded archaeological site in the Upper Apalachicola River ...
This research compares prehistoric check-stamped ceramics from two northwest Florida sites, Sunstrok...
With this thesis, I aim to fill a gap in our knowledge of shell artifacts from the northwest part of...
This research examines and compares the distributions of archaeological sites and materials in order...
Archaeological reconnaissance in portions of Dixie County and selected adjacent sections of Taylor a...
The Woodland period (1000 BC – AD 1000) in the Southeastern US is characterized by sedentary horticu...
The objective of my research was to compile all known burial data from the Fort Walton culture locat...
During the Middle Woodland Period (300 BC – AD 600), ceremonial centers began to rise throughout the...