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         North America Archeology:     more books (100)
  1. Preliminary excavations of Pershing County caves (Bulletin / Nevada State Museum, Dept. of Archeology) by Phil C Orr, 1952
  2. Apishapa Canyon archeology: Excavations at the Cramer, Snake Blakeslee and nearby sites (Reprints in anthropology) by James H Gunnerson, 1989
  3. Salvage archeology of the John Redmond Lake, Kansas by Larry J Schmits, 1980
  4. Historical Perspectives on Midsouth Archeology (Arkansas Archeological Report Research Series)
  5. Prehistoric Life on the Mississippi Floodplain: Stone Tool Use, Settlement Organization, and Subsistence Practices at the Labras Lake Site, Illinois (Prehistoric Archeology and Ecology) by Richard Yerkes, 1987-01
  6. Oahe Reservoir: Archeology, geology, history by Warren W Caldwell, 1963
  7. The archeology of the upper Verdigris watershed, (Kansas State Historical Society. Anthropological series) by F. A Calabrese, 1967
  8. Tracking Ancient Footsteps: William D. Lipe's Contributions to Southwestern Prehistory And Public Archeology
  9. Clues from the Past: A Resource Book on Archeology by Pam Wheat, 1990-11
  10. Prehistoric mortuary remains at the Tuck Carpenter Site, Camp County, Texas (Studies in archeology / Texas Archeological Research Laboratory, the University of Texas at Austin) by Robert L Turner, 1992
  11. authoritative book for the general reader and student on the archeology,ethnology,and history of the tribes and cultures of the indians of north and south america from prehistoric times to the present day by Alvin M Josephy, 1974
  12. Method and Theory in Historical Archeology (Studies in Archeology) by Stanley A. South, 1977-06
  13. A ceramic study of Virginia archeology (Smithsonian Institution. Bureau of American Ethnology. Bulletin) by Clifford Evans, 1955
  14. Aboriginal use of wood in New York, (New York state education department. Bulletin 344, June, 1905. New York state museum. Bulletin 89. Archeology 11) by William Martin Beauchamp, 1905

81. Archaeology Of The Tundra And Arctic Alaska
were the first group of people to spread across the north American arctic, Further north, it seems to have been superseded by the Ipiutak culture
http://www.nps.gov/akso/akarc/arctic.htm
Archaeology of the Tundra and Arctic Alaska
Tundra and Arctic
In an area stretching along the coastline from Bristol Bay and the Alaska Peninsula, along the Bering Sea and Chukchi Sea coasts, northward around Alaska, and eastwards across the arctic all the way to Greenland, the coastline is ice-bound in winter and the terrain is generally treeless. In this zone, which can be up to several hundred kilometers broad, developed much of the culture of modern Eskimo (Inupiat and Yupik in Alaska) peoples. Some decisive and significant adaptations took place here and in adjacent Siberia that allowed a more efficient exploitation of this zone. Settlements spread and grew, in some places becoming more specialized, as the historically visible cultures appeared.
Arctic Small Tool Tradition
One of the most distinctive and widespread Arctic cultural traditions appeared around 4000 BP. The Arctic Small Tool tradition (ASTt) was first called the Denbigh Flint complex by its discoverer, Louis Giddings (1964), after the type site on Cape Denbigh on Norton Sound. Subsequently, it has been found throughout the Tundra and Arctic Zone that is characterized by coasts that are ice-bound in winter and treeless hinterland, from the Bering Sea side of the Alaska Peninsula, northward along the coast and throughout the Brooks Range, and eventually, along the Canadian Arctic coast and the Arctic Archipelago to Greenland. The archeological assemblage is distinctive. It derives its name from the finely-flaked, tiny lithic tools that are its hallmark. Irving (1964), from the perspective of the Punyik Point site in the Brooks Range, linked the widespread appeance of these distinctive tools into the Arctic Small Tool tradition.

82. Bibliography Of Alaskan Archaeology
1984 Prehistory of north Alaska. In Handbook of north American Indians, National Museum of Man, Mercury Series, Archaeology Survey of Canada Paper No.
http://www.nps.gov/akso/akarc/bib.htm
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Ackerman, Robert
1964 Prehistory in the Kuskokwim - Bristol Bay Region, SW Alaska. Laboratory of Anthropology No. 2. Washington State University, Pullman.
1984 Prehistory of the Asian Eskimo Zone. Handbook of North American Indians, Vol 5. edited by David Damas. Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. pp. 106-118. Adovasio, J. M., J.D. Gunn, J. Donahue, and R. Stuckenrath
1978 Meadowcroft Rockshelter, 1977: An Overview. American Antiquity, 43(4): 632-651 Alexander, Herbert
1969 Prehistory of the Central Brooks Range - An Archaeological Analysis. Ph.D. Dissertation, University of Oregon. University Microfilms, Ann Arbor.
Anderson, Douglas D.
1968a A Stone Age Campsite at the Gateway to America. Scientific American Vol. 218(6): 24-33.
1968b Early Notched Point and Related Assemblages in the Western American Arctic. Ms. on file, Department of Anthropology, Brown University.
1970a Akmak: An Early Archaeological Assemblage from Onion Portage, Northwest Alaska. Acta Artica, 16. Copenhagen.

83. North American Archaeology - Book Information
Series Blackwell Studies in Global Archaeology. north American Archaeology cover Alternative Histories and north American Archaeology Timothy R.
http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/book.asp?ref=0631231846

84. ANT310y - History Of North American Archaeology
OF north AMERICAN ARCHAEOLOGY. ? Thomas Jefferson and the first stratigraphicexcavation, Virginia 1782. ? The Mounds and the Moundbuilders
http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~coupland/ANT310/lectures/history.htm
A BRIEF HISTORY OF NORTH AMERICAN ARCHAEOLOGY Thomas Jefferson and the first stratigraphic excavation, Virginia 1782 The Mounds and the Moundbuilders - a controversey that lasted more than a century: who built these mounds? - mostly located in American Mid-west, especially southern Illinois, Ohio - included mounds, platform mounds, and A earthworks , some very large - fanciful theories about the moundbuilders, constrained by biblical teachings and current condition of Native Americans - mound mappers; E.G Squier and E.H. Davis , 1840s despite detailed maps, they still believed in lost race of moundbuilders - mound realists: Samuel Haven, John Wesley Powell, Cyrus Thomas , 1850-1890s, slowly but steadily showed that moundbuilders were ancestors of Native Americans Classificatory-Descriptive Period - characterized by systematic classification and description of archaeological sites, features, artifacts across North America - beginning with Squier/Davis mapping of earthworks - furthered by establishment of Bureau of Ethnolgy (at Smithsonian) by J.W. Powell, 1870s - other highlights: W. H. Holmes

85. Baywood.com
The north American Archaeologist surveys all aspects of prehistoric and historic It accents the results of Resource Management and Contract Archaeology,
http://baywood.com/journals/PreviewJournals.asp?Id=0197-6931

86. Internet Bookwatch: North American Archaeology
Full text of the article, north American Archaeology from Internet Bookwatch,a publication in the field of Arts Entertainment, is provided free of
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0SFC/is_2005_Feb/ai_n13467484
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IN free articles only all articles this publication Automotive Sports FindArticles Internet Bookwatch Feb 2005 Content provided in partnership with
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Afterimage American Drama American Music Teacher ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports North American Archaeology Internet Bookwatch Feb, 2005
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. North American Archaeology Blackwell Publishing 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148 www.blackwellpublishing.com Collaboratively compiled and co-edited by Timothy R. Pauketat and Diana DiPaolo Loren, North American Archaeology is an anthology of essays by learned and scholarly authors concerning hot topics in archeology on the North American continent. Individual contributions include The Peopling of North America, Creolization in the French and Spanish Colonies, Archaeology and the African Diaspora on the Atlantic Seabord, Labor and Class in the American West, and more. Each essay is carefully researched, presenting its reasonings and conclusions in detail, with a handful of black-and-white maps or diagrams as needed. A glossary of technical terms rounds out this welcome contribution to archaeology studies and reference shelves.

87. Wisconsin Bookwatch: North American Archaeology
Full text of the article, north American Archaeology from Wisconsin Bookwatch,a publication in the field of Arts Entertainment, is provided free of
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0RGS/is_2005_Feb/ai_n9542009
@import url(/css/us/style1.css); @import url(/css/us/searchResult1.css); @import url(/css/us/articles.css); @import url(/css/us/artHome1.css); Home
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IN free articles only all articles this publication Automotive Sports FindArticles Wisconsin Bookwatch Feb 2005 Content provided in partnership with
10,000,000 articles Not found on any other search engine. Related Searches
Books / Book reviews
North American Archaeology (Book) / Book reviews Featured Titles for
ALAN Review
Afterimage American Drama American Music Teacher ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports North American Archaeology Wisconsin Bookwatch Feb, 2005
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. North American Archaeology Blackwell Publishing 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148 www.blackwellpublishing.com Collaboratively compiled and co-edited by Timothy R. Pauketat and Diana DiPaolo Loren, North American Archaeology is an anthology of essays by learned and scholarly authors concerning hot topics in archeology on the North American continent. Individual contributions include The Peopling of North America, Creolization in the French and Spanish Colonies, Archaeology and the African Diaspora on the Atlantic Seabord, Labor and Class in the American West, and more. Each essay is carefully researched, presenting its reasonings and conclusions in detail, with a handful of black-and-white maps or diagrams as needed. A glossary of technical terms rounds out this welcome contribution to archaeology studies and reference shelves.

88. Encyclopedia Of North American Indians - - Archaeology And Indians
Encyclopedia of north American Indians Despite the growing participation ofIndians in archaeology, some feelings of apprehension and anxiety persist,
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_002400_archaeologya.ht
Entries Publication Data Advisory Board Maps ... World Civilizations Encyclopedia of North American Indians
Archaeology and Indians
The people who populated what we now call the Americas probably sailed or walked across the Bering Strait several thousand years ago—considerably before the Norsemen who discovered "Vineland" and long before Columbus arrived. Only sixty miles of open water separate Alaska from Russia; the strait freezes from time to time, enabling people to walk across it. We do not know who these people were or what they called themselves. But European explorers found them from the Bering Strait to Tierra del Fuego. It is unfortunate that the people Columbus encountered continue to be classified as a homogeneous group called Indians. Native scholars use the terms Indian and Native American reluctantly. The field of archaeology is a discipline that has been little understood in the Native American community. Digging about in the ancient tombs and robbing graves are activities Native Americans associate with witchcraft and consider to be fraught with the danger of contamination and death. Traditionally, most Indian people would not consider digging up another human being's remains. However, times change. The European explorers were fascinated by the native people they encountered in North America. Who were they? The ten lost tribes of Israel? Were they human? Non-Indians sought answers to these questions by excavating ancient settlement and burial sites. And from the first, they turned to Indian laborers to assist them. But native people have long since outgrown their status as mere informants or laborers for anthropologists. They have over the past fifty years become literate and are now ready to take an active role in the wider subject of human studies. They are no longer content to be examined, poked, dissected, analyzed, and interpreted by outsiders. They now request—no, they demand—that they be allowed to take an active role in the study of their people and their cultures.

89. African American Archaeology And African Diaspora Archaeology Resources
African American Archaeology Resources, African American Cultures and History,African Diaspora arrow Africans on the north American Frontier, 15281864
http://www.anthro.uiuc.edu/faculty/cfennell/bookmark3.html
African American Archaeology,
History and Cultures
Table of Contents
African American Archaeology
General

Sites in Northeast Region

Sites in Mid-Atlantic
...
African Heritage in Britain

This web site is designed to provide convenient access to online presentations and resources concerning the subjects of African American archaeology, history and cultures, and broader subjects of African diaspora archaeology. The principal focus is on providing links to online presentations concerning African American archaeology projects, set out in the first sections below, with links listed alphabetically by state within each regional section. Additional links to online resources and presentations concerning African American history and culture, African archaeology, African history and cultures, African heritage in Britain, and the subjects of slavery, resistance and abolition are also provided. Bibliographies and research guides to print publications within each subject area are included. Please contact the editor, Chris Fennell , with any additional resource links you would like to see added to this site, or with the title, author, and publication information for any print sources you would like to see added to the bibliographies.

90. Untitled Document
Experience in eastern north American archaeology is provided by an archaeologicalfield school at an Iroquois site in New York, an internship program with
http://www.pitt.edu/~pittanth/LAA.html
u Department
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Exciting new faculty research in China, Russia, and North America, together with our long-standing commitment to Latin American archaeology, is the foundation for a graduate program that emphasizes a comparative perspective on complex societies Central to our graduate program are methods and theory important to understanding complex societies generally - - from early chiefdoms to prehistory's largest empires. Our comparative orientation features approaches ranging from regional analysis to materials analysis, and issues such as the development of social complexity, sources of political power and legitimization, domestic and political economy, state formation, gender, culture contact, and imperial frontier processes, all viewed from a variety of theoretical perspectives.
Commitment to Latin American Archaeology Current faculty research provides the basis of our focus on complex societies of prehispanic Latin America. Faculty projects are concerned with:

91. Lycoming College: North American Archaeology
The value of north American archaeology is that it gives you a broader anthropologicalperspective. As a student of NA Archaeology, ultimately you will come
http://www.lycoming.edu/arch/namer/whynaarch.html

LYCOMING

COLLEGE

Williamsport, PA
Why North

American

Archaeology?
Introduction to ... Links
North American Archaeology Why North American Archaeology? Here are several good reasons why you may consider studying North American Archaeology:
  • To gain an understanding of the development of prehistoric American Indian cultures in the main geographical regions of the continent and in Pennsylvania,
  • To examine the archaeological process and how archaeologists investigate and interpret the North American archaeological record, and
  • To develop an appreciation of the technological skills of prehistoric American Indians through "hands on" experience.
This approach stresses the relationship between the prehistoric archaeological record and the development of contemporary American Indian cultural identity and heritage. There are major debates that are shaping archaeological knowledge of North America. The value of North American archaeology is that it gives you a broader anthropological perspective. As a student of NA Archaeology, ultimately you will come to understand archaeology as both a scientific pursuit and a humanistic quest. Through the study of the richness and diversity of the North American archaeological record you will gain an increased understanding of the people behind the artifacts and the need for preservation and protection of archaeological sites.

92. Lycoming College: North American Archaeology
north American Archaeology. Bressler Heritage Trail. Riverfront Park HonorsBressler With Heritage Trail By Robin Van Auken. Even on a gray afternoon,
http://www.lycoming.edu/arch/namer/breshertrail.html

LYCOMING

COLLEGE

Williamsport, PA
Why North

American

Archaeology?
Introduction to ... Links
North American Archaeology Bressler Heritage Trail Riverfront Park Honors Bressler With Heritage Trail
By Robin Van Auken Even on a gray afternoon, with the rain misting and a chill wind blowing, a stroll along the James P. Bressler Heritage Trail is invigorating and educational. It's also tranquil, this quiet spot along the Susquehanna River's West Branch. Completed in September, the trail is part of Loyalsock Township's Riverfront Park and is dedicated to James P. Bressler. A scholar and educator beloved in his community, Bressler has carved a niche for himself in the region's prehistory and history books with his archaeological investigations. "That is, in my estimation, one of the best-kept secrets in the county," Bressler said about the trail. "This is a unique attempt to integrate a number of different things. First of all, local history is really not being taught in our schools because there are too many competing things to teach. I understand that. But this is a unique way to combine a pleasant walk, a history lesson, and nature study. It's just a pleasure to walk around there." Excavating Native American sites for the past four decades, Bressler has led several digs on and near Canfield Island, a small spit of land turned into a man-made island by 19th-century lumber mill owners. Publishing his findings in a series of books, Bressler and volunteers from North Central Chapter No. 8, Society of Pennsylvania Archaeology, have added immensely to the area's knowledge of Native American culture as far back as 5000 B.P. (Before Present).

93. Fantastic Archaeology: The Wild Side Of North American Prehistory - FARMS Review
Fantastic Archaeology The Wild Side of north American Prehistory A HarvardUniversity chairholder in American archaeology has here published his own
http://farms.byu.edu/display.php?table=review&id=107

94. Fantastic Archaeology: The Wild Side Of North American Prehistory - FARMS Review
Fantastic Archaeology The Wild Side of north American Prehistory StephenWilliams is Peabody Professor of American Archaeology and Ethnology and
http://farms.byu.edu/display.php?table=review&id=106

95. Archaeology At Washington University In St. Louis
TR Kidder (Prof; Archaeology). north American archaeology; geoarchaeology;archaeological theory and method; ceramic analysis; humans and climate change;
http://www.artsci.wustl.edu/~archae/Archaeology/Archaeology.htm
Archaeology Graduate Program Faculty Undergraduate Program Archaeology is one of three programs (with Physical Anthropology and Sociocultural Anthropology) in the Department of Anthropology at Washington University. The archaeology program offers graduate and undergraduate training in a broad array of topical and geographic areas of study. We emphasize the combination of strong theoretical grounding in anthropology and archaeology with topical subspecialization to produce well trained, versatile, and marketable Ph.D. students. We also provide the opportunity for geographical concentration in Old and New World prehistory with on-going research taking place in Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, Bolivia, Ecuador, Mexico, Italy, Scotland, and numerous locations in the United States. Our program is highly interdisciplinary: faculty and students work with scholars in different fields at Washington University and around the globe to produce a better understanding of human culture and history. Graduate Study in Archaeology : Within the archaeology program there are areas of special concentration reflecting faculty interest and special research resources. We have highly regarded programs in paleoethnobotany , zooarchaeology, and geoarchaeology . Current faculty research is focused on the Mississippi Valley, the Southwest (including northern Mexico)

96. Harvard Extension School North American Archaeology
Harvard Extension School 200405. north American Archaeology. Liberal arts andprofessional degree, certificate, ESL, and distance education programs.
http://www.extension.harvard.edu/2004-05/courses/12429.jsp

97. Archaeology Links (NC)
Anthropology, Archaeology, and American Indian Studies on the Net Archaeology Links, north Carolina Archaeology is a member of the following WEBRINGS.
http://www.arch.dcr.state.nc.us/links.htm
ARCHAEOLOGY-RELATED
LINKS
Courtesy of North Carolina Archaeology
Updated 02/21/00

98. AN315 NORTH AMERICAN ARCHAEOLOGY SPRING,1998
We will begin with a review of the nature of north American archaeology and asummary of This book must be about a topic in north American archaeology.
http://www.chss.iup.edu/anthropology/courses/Sn315-syll.html
Dr. Sarah W. Neusius Office: McElhaney G12E Phone: Ext 2133, E-mail: SAWN
Office Hours: MWF 1:30-2:30; TR 9-9:30 and 11:30-12:00 P.M.
CONTENT AND GOALS OF THIS COURSE METHODS OF EVALUATION
Your grade will be based on how many of the 500 possible points you earn as follows: TESTS : 300 points (60%) can be earned on 3 tests. Two of these tests will be given during class periods and a final, non-comprehensive test will be given during the final exam period as shown on the attached schedule. Each test will have a combination of objective questions, definitions and essay questions. MAKEUPS ON THESE TESTS GENERALLY WILL REQUIRE A WRITTEN MEDICAL EXCUSE OR DOCUMENTATION OF FAMILY EMERGENCY. REACTION PAPERS :100 points can be earned on five reaction papers (worth 10 pts each) written in response to readings from Native Americans and Archaeologists: Stepping Stones to Common Ground. As described under Instructions for Reaction papers you have some choice as to due dates for these papers as there are seven possible papers. BOOK REVIEW : Each student must also select, read and critique one major archaeological study during the semester. A 3-5 page review paper on this book Is required and is worth 50 points. ALL BOOKS MUST BE APPROVED BY DR. NEUSIUS. See schedule for important dates and Instructions for Book Reviews for more details.

99. Research Projects - Eastern High Arctic Archaeology Project - Arctic Institute O
The Institute s mandate is to advance the study of the north American and Eastern High Arctic Archaeology Project. This project, started in 1977,
http://www.ucalgary.ca/AINA/research/projects_soc_eastern.html
RESEARCH
Projects
Social
Sciences
Eastern High Arctic Archaeology Project This project, started in 1977, involves long-term archaeological investigations in the Kane Basin/Smith Sound region of the central east coast of Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada. The area of study, an important migration route between the Canadian High Arctic and Greenland, extends from Washington Irving Island at the entrance to Dobbin Bay (79 33 N) south to Goding Bay (77 45 N). The overall objective of the research is to document the human presence in this region of the Canadian High Arctic, from the initial Palaeoeskimo occupations of 4000 years ago, to the arrival of the nineteenth-century European and American explorers. Specific research objectives include studies of Palaeo- and Neoeskimo subsistence patterns and hunting strategies; causal factors involved in demographic fluctuations; the importance of Arctic polynyas; the pioneering presence of the Thule culture Inuit; and High Arctic contact between Inuit and Norse populations. Some of the project results are included in the books Crossroads to Greenland: 3000 Years of Prehistory in the Eastern High Arctic and The Ruin Islanders: Early Thule Culture Pioneers in the Eastern High Arctic For more information please contact the investigators.

100. Coyote Press: North American Archaeology
The First American A Story of north American Archaeology. Ceram, CW HarcourtBrace Stated first edition Hardcover. Very good condition in like near very
http://www.coyotepress.com/cgi-bin/cyp455/scan/mp=keywords/se=North American Arc
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The First American: A Story of North American Archaeology.
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Harcourt Brace Stated first edition Hardcover. Very good condition in like near very good dust jacket. 10802.
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  • Add to Cart Man in Northeastern North America. Papers of the Robert S. Peabody Foundation for Archaeology Vol. 3 Johnson, Frederick, ed. Phillips Academy Original edition. Softcover. Near very good condition. 10383.

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