This paper uses lithic analysis, floral analysis, and radiocarbon dating to determine the period of cultural occupation at the Harriet Johnson Site located in the Superior National Forest (SNF) of northeastern Minnesota and partially excavated in the summers of 2004 and 2005. Statistical analysis of the artifact assemblage currently on loan from the SNF and housed at the Mississippi Valley Archaeology Center indicated the range of local lithic raw materials present, tool types, and levels of cultural occupations. The working hypothesis is that this site has a Shield Archaic component as well as a possible Paleoindian component. Statistical analysis of the total lithics recovered using Microsoft Access has helped to provide a means to de...
The goals of this research are to come to a greater understanding of site formation processes at the...
Graduation date: 1983Presentation date: 1982-04-30In 1976, cultural resource technicians for the Rog...
Based on lithic studies, it appears that the early inhabitants of the Great Basin were mobile, far-r...
Household Versus Workshop: Lithic Analysis of a Middle Mississippian Site The Mississippian Period r...
The Jackson site (DiMe-17) is a Late Precontact site located in the Lauder Sand Hills of southwester...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. March 2011. Major: Anthropology. Advisor: Gilbert B. Tos...
The time period of the Middle Woodland era (200 BCE to 400 CE) was a time of great transition and ch...
Access to thesis restricted until 05/2022.This research addresses the cultural similarities and diff...
The purpose of this study is to better understand the transmission of Mississippian cultural practic...
This thesis summarizes the results of an analysis of stone tools from site DhRp-52 to determine diff...
The goal of this study is the examination of the temporal variability between the Mississippian I an...
Supposed ancestors of the modern-day Chickasaw, the occupants of Stark Farm inhabited the area known...
Precontact Native Americans discarded waste into pits near their house or village. Refuse pits becom...
For decades archaeologists have been interested in the operational sequence of material culture. Thi...
The Mississippian Period is well-known for its paramount chiefdoms, intricate ceramic/lithic/metal a...
The goals of this research are to come to a greater understanding of site formation processes at the...
Graduation date: 1983Presentation date: 1982-04-30In 1976, cultural resource technicians for the Rog...
Based on lithic studies, it appears that the early inhabitants of the Great Basin were mobile, far-r...
Household Versus Workshop: Lithic Analysis of a Middle Mississippian Site The Mississippian Period r...
The Jackson site (DiMe-17) is a Late Precontact site located in the Lauder Sand Hills of southwester...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. March 2011. Major: Anthropology. Advisor: Gilbert B. Tos...
The time period of the Middle Woodland era (200 BCE to 400 CE) was a time of great transition and ch...
Access to thesis restricted until 05/2022.This research addresses the cultural similarities and diff...
The purpose of this study is to better understand the transmission of Mississippian cultural practic...
This thesis summarizes the results of an analysis of stone tools from site DhRp-52 to determine diff...
The goal of this study is the examination of the temporal variability between the Mississippian I an...
Supposed ancestors of the modern-day Chickasaw, the occupants of Stark Farm inhabited the area known...
Precontact Native Americans discarded waste into pits near their house or village. Refuse pits becom...
For decades archaeologists have been interested in the operational sequence of material culture. Thi...
The Mississippian Period is well-known for its paramount chiefdoms, intricate ceramic/lithic/metal a...
The goals of this research are to come to a greater understanding of site formation processes at the...
Graduation date: 1983Presentation date: 1982-04-30In 1976, cultural resource technicians for the Rog...
Based on lithic studies, it appears that the early inhabitants of the Great Basin were mobile, far-r...