Bibliography of the Minnesota Archaeologist

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Bibliography of the Minnesota Archaeologist Bibliography of The Minnesota Archaeologist This list of all authors and titles published in our journal, The Minnesota Archaeologist, since its inception was prepared by MAS member and volunteer extraordinaire Randy Blasus. Our many thanks for such a useful effort. ______________________________________________________________________________________________ Adams, Z. G. (ed.) 1951 Indian Village at Fort Berthold (reprint) 17(1, January):3-9 Anderson, Dean 1985 Book Review: "A Toast to the Fur Trade: A Picture Essay on its Material Culture" By Robert C. Wheeler 44(1, Spring/Summer):47-48 Anfinson, John O. 1987 Book Review: "Fort Snelling: Colossus of the Wilderness" by Steve Hall 46(2):67-68 Anfinson, Scott F. 1982 A Bibliography of Lloyd Wilford 41(1, Spring/Summer):75-78 1982 Faunal Remains from the Big Slough Site (21 MU 1) and Woodland Cultural Stability in Southwestern Minnesota 41(1, Spring/Summer):53-71 1984 Cultural and Natural Aspects of Mound Distribution in Minnesota 43(1, Spring/Summer):3-30 1987 Investigations at Two Oneota Sites in the Center Creek Locality 46(1):31-45 1988 Editorial 47(2):2-3 1989 Archaeology of the Central Minneapolis Riverfront Part 1: Historical Overview and Archaeological Potentials 48(1 & 2):1-160 1990 Archaeology of the Central Minneapolis Riverfront Part 2: Archaeological Explorations and Interpretive Potentials 49(1 & 2):i-143 Anfinson, Scott F. & Leslie D. Peterson 1979 Minnesota's Highway Archaeological Programs 38(2, May):86-104 Anonymous 1935 Investigating Mound Builders (reprint) 1(3, August):4-5 1935 The Hardening of Copper (excerpt reprint) 1(6, November):9 1936 Forgotten Coppersmiths (excerpt reprint from Skillings Mining Review) 2:(3, March)9-10 1936 La Verendrye's Journal (excerpt reprint) 2(10, October):7-10 1942 The Migration Routes Of the Cheyenne 8(3, July):124-125 1942 In Memoriam - M. H. Munhall 8(4, October):184 1943 In Memoriam - George P. Hodge 9(2, April):83 1945 Burial Mounds in South Dakota 11(3, July):69 1945 Two Unusual Oneota Vessels 11(3, July):70 1945 In Memoriam: Dr. Rodney B. Harvey 11(4, October):147 1962 Iron Buffalo Spear 24(3, July):86 1964 In Memoriam: Richard R. Sackett 26(1, January):23 1964 Plates of "Old Copper" Objects 26(1, January):23-30 1964 Hopewellian Monitor and Dog Head Effigy Pipes (plate) 26(3, July):100 1964 Iron Buffalo Spear (plate) 26(3, July):101 1966 The Jeffers Petroglyphs 28(3):110-140 1975 Society Adopts Code of Ethics for All Members 34(3 & 4):i-ii 1978 The Current officers of the Society Report on Their Activities 37(3, August):100-102 1978 Report of the Publications Committee 37(3, August):102-103 1978 Inventory of Minnesota Archaeological Society Property 37(3, August):104 1978 Revision of the Constitution and By-Laws, Minnesota Archaeological Society 37(3, August):105-111 1978 Federal and State Antiquities Laws 37(3, August):112-116 1978 Special Pull-Out Supplement to the Minnesota Archaeologist (center fold) - What Would You Do if You Found an Artifact - Poll of MAS Members 37(4, November) 1979 Minnesota Historical Society Film Series and Lectures on Historical Archaeology 38(2, May):54 1979 Minnesota Archaeological Society Program Calendar for 1979 38(2, May):55 1979 The North West Company Wintering Post on the Snake River 38(2, May):56-66 1979 Titles in the Series: "Occasional Publications in Minnesota Anthropology" 38(3, August):149-150 1979 Rev. John Eastman (reprint) 38(4, November):206-208 1979 Information for Authors 38(4, November):208 1980 Minnesota Archaeological Society Program Calendar for 1980 39(1, February):2 1979 Five Year Index (1975 -1979) to the Minnesota Archaeologist 39(1, February):40-50 1980 The Minnesota Burials Statute 307.08 39(3, August):153-154 1981 The Viking Exhibition at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts 40(1, March):2-9 1981 The Minnesota Paraprofessional Certification Program 40(1, March):47-50 1981 A Race For Life (reprint) 40(2, June):93-95 1984 Revision off the Constitution and By-Laws 43(1, Spring/Summer):62-66 2010 Memoriam: Monroe Paul Killy, 1910-2010 69:7-12 Anttila, Oliver N. 2009 Ancient Copper Crosses Borders: Copper Toolmakers Migrate out of Minnesota into Northwestern Ontario 68:107-119 Arndt, Armin 1935 Indian Pictographs in Minnesota 1(6, November):7-8 Babcock, Willoughby M. 1945 The Taliaferro Map of the St. Peters Indian Agency 11(4, October):118-125 1945 Sioux Villages in Minnesota Prior to 1837 11(4, October):126-146 1946 William Whipple Warren and His Chippewa Writings 12(3, July):40-42 1948 Sioux Indian Customs, as Observed by Dr. Thomas S. Williamson and Reverend Stephen R. Riggs 14(4, October):73-75 1954 The Minnesota Indian and His History (reprint) 19(3, July):18-25 Baker, Jonathan D. & James L. Theler 2005 Animal Remains from the Midway Site (21BL37), Beltrami County, Minnesota 64:105-143 Bakken, Kent 1985 Lithic Raw Materials in Northwest Minnesota 44(1, Spring/Summer):34-46 1988 A Middle Woodland Beach Ridge Site in Roseau County, Minnesota 47(1):35-42 1997 Lithic Raw Material Resources in Minnesota 56 (Omnibus Issue):49-83 2006 The Lower Rice Lake Site, 21CE5 65:31-75 2007 The Elliot Park Neighborhood Archaeology Project: The First Fifteen Days 66 :23-35 2008 Archaeology: An Introduction for Elliot Park Volunteers 67:137-139 Barbeau, Marius 1940 Indian Trade Silver of Canada 6(4, October):120-138 Barmore, Frank E. 1985 The Blue Mound Stone Wall: Astronomical Significance and Antiquity 44(2, Fall Winter):41-49 Barnes, Alfred S. 1978 The English Method of Manufacturing Gunflints and Its Relationship to the Tardenois Burin (reprint, translated) 37(1, February):27-32 Beadle, B. V. 1942 A Recent Find of Carved Shell Effigies 8(4, October):169 Beadle, Bernard 1971 In Memoriam: Fred E. Lawshe 31(4):127 Beaubien, Paul, L. 1957 Notes on the Archaeology of Pipestone National Monument 21(3, Fall):1-22 1983 Notes on the Archaeology of Pipestone National Monument (reprint) 42(1 & 2):37-80 Belcourt, Rev. Gus 1938 Memorial From the Half-Breeds Of Pembina (reprint) 4(1, January):6-7 Benden, Danielle 2004 The Fisher Mounds Site Complex: Early Middle Mississippian Exploration in the Upper Mississippi Valley 63:7-26 Berg, Ernest L. 1945 Stone and Metallic Materials Used by Ancient Indians of Minnesota in the Making of Artifacts 11(1, January):3-17 Berg, Richard E. & James E. Myster 2006 Archaeological Remains of Two Mid-Nineteenth-Century Dakota Homes Associated with the Riggs Hazelwood Mission Site (21YM11/YM-MNF-007) 65:129-173 Big Man, Max 1936 The Crow Indians, (résumé of presentation) 2(2, February):6-8 Bird, Walter D. 1946 Animal-Head Effigy Pipe, Becker County, Minnesota 12(1, January):6-6 Birk, Douglas A. 1973 The Survey of Grey Cloud Island, Washington County, Minnesota: An Archaeological Approach 32(1 & 2):1)102 1977 Two Sandy Lake Ware Vessels from Onigum Point, Cass County, Minnesota 36(1, February):9-13 1977 The Norway Lake Site: A Multicomponent Woodland Complex in North Central Minnesota (21 CA 22) 36(1, February)16-45 1992 Putting Minnesota on the Map: Early French Presence in the Folle Avoine Region Southwest of Lake Superior 51(Omnibus Issue):7-26 1993 Church Schools and Chiefs' Houses: A Documentary View of Protestant Missions in the Folle Avoine District of the St. Croix Valley, 1833-1850 52(Omnibus Issue):39-51 2007 On the Trail of Untold Stories: Archaeological Inquiries Along The Old Grand Portage 66:9-20 2008 Lost, Found, and Fading away: The Archaeology of a North West Company Fort Site at Whitefish Lake, Crow Wing County, Minnesota 67:140-174 Birk, Douglas A. & Douglas C. George 1976 A Woodland Survey Strategy and Its Application in the Salvage of a Late Archaic Locus of the Smith Mounds Site, (21-KC-3), Koochiching County, Minnesota 35(3, November)1-30 Black, Glenn A. 1945 Supplementary Information on "TD" Pipes 11(2, April):50 Blessing, Fred K., Jr. 1935 A Brief Summary of the Eight Cultures of the Southwest 1(5, October)1-4 1937 The Pipestone Parade 3(8, August):73 1944 A Glossary of a Minnesota Ojibway Dialect 10(1, January):3-66 1952 The Physical Characteristics of Southern Ojibway Woodcraft 18(4, October):9-21 1954 A Southern Ojibwa Glossary 19(1, January):2-57 1954 Some Observations on the Use of Bark by Southern Ojibway Indians 19(4, October):3-14 1956 Some Uses of Bone, Horn, Claws and Teeth by Minnesota Ojibwa Indians 20(3, July):1-11 1956 Contemporary Costuming of Minnesota Chippewa Indians 20(4, October):1-8 1956 An Exhibition of Mide Magic 20(4, October):9-13 1956 Miscellany 20(4, October):14-17 1957 Tribute to a Benefactress and Poet 21(2, Spring):3-4 1958 Notes from the Field: Summer 1958 22(1, Spring):1-15 1958 Chippewa Singing 22(1, Spring):16-17 1958 Where Can I Find an Arrowhead? 22(1, Spring):18-20 1958 Field Notes for 1959 22(2, Fall):1-7 1961 Discovery of a Chippewa Peyote Cult in Minnesota 23(1, January):1-8 1961 Fasting and Dreams Among Minnesota Ojibway 23(1, January):9-11 1961 A Visit to an Ojibway Dream Dance 23(1, January):12-16 1961 A Visit to an Indian Fair 23(1, January):17-19 1961 Birch Bark Cutting Tools 23(2, April):27-32 1962 Discovery of Historic Objects at the Site of Old Fort Snelling 24(2, April):54-65 1963 Birchbark Mide Scrolls From Minnesota 25(3, July):91-141 1967 Salvage Work at the Bryan Site 29(3):57-77 1969 Onto-Cosmology, Paper No.
Recommended publications
  • HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT: an Inventory of Its State Park Maps
    MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY Minnesota State Archives HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT An Inventory of Its State Park Maps OVERVIEW OF THE RECORDS Agency: Minnesota. Dept. of Highways. Series Title: State park maps, Dates: 1922. Abstract: Blueprint maps showing boundaries and facilities in state parks. Quantity: 22 items in oversize folder. Location: A3/ov4 Drawer 2 SCOPE AND CONTENTS OF THE RECORDS Blueprint maps showing boundaries and facilities in various state parks, with proposed expansions of the park's land area or the addition of facilities. Most show plot plans and give elevation information. The maps were drawn by the Highway Department on orders of Governor J. A. O. Preus for use in legislative deliberations regarding park budgets, according to information printed on the maps. RELATED MATERIALS Related materials: Later state park maps, created by the state Conservation Department, are found with that department's records. INDEX TERMS This collection is indexed under the following headings in the catalog of the Minnesota Historical Society. Researchers desiring materials about related topics, persons or places should search the catalog using these headings. Topics: Mapping. Parks--Minnesota--Maps. Parks--Minnesota--Finance. Types of Documents: Hghwy005.inv HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT. State Park Maps, 1922. p. 2 Maps--Minnesota. Site plans--Minnesota. ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION Preferred Citation: [Indicate the cited item here]. Minnesota. Dept. of Highways. State park maps, 1922. Minnesota Historical Society. State Archives. See the Chicago Manual of Style for additional examples. Accession Information: Accession number(s): 991-52 Processing Information: PALS ID No.: 0900036077 RLIN ID No.: MNHV94-A228 ITEM LIST Note to Researchers: To request materials, please note the location and drawer number shown below.
    [Show full text]
  • A Many-Storied Place
    A Many-storied Place Historic Resource Study Arkansas Post National Memorial, Arkansas Theodore Catton Principal Investigator Midwest Region National Park Service Omaha, Nebraska 2017 A Many-Storied Place Historic Resource Study Arkansas Post National Memorial, Arkansas Theodore Catton Principal Investigator 2017 Recommended: {){ Superintendent, Arkansas Post AihV'j Concurred: Associate Regional Director, Cultural Resources, Midwest Region Date Approved: Date Remove not the ancient landmark which thy fathers have set. Proverbs 22:28 Words spoken by Regional Director Elbert Cox Arkansas Post National Memorial dedication June 23, 1964 Table of Contents List of Figures vii Introduction 1 1 – Geography and the River 4 2 – The Site in Antiquity and Quapaw Ethnogenesis 38 3 – A French and Spanish Outpost in Colonial America 72 4 – Osotouy and the Changing Native World 115 5 – Arkansas Post from the Louisiana Purchase to the Trail of Tears 141 6 – The River Port from Arkansas Statehood to the Civil War 179 7 – The Village and Environs from Reconstruction to Recent Times 209 Conclusion 237 Appendices 241 1 – Cultural Resource Base Map: Eight exhibits from the Memorial Unit CLR (a) Pre-1673 / Pre-Contact Period Contributing Features (b) 1673-1803 / Colonial and Revolutionary Period Contributing Features (c) 1804-1855 / Settlement and Early Statehood Period Contributing Features (d) 1856-1865 / Civil War Period Contributing Features (e) 1866-1928 / Late 19th and Early 20th Century Period Contributing Features (f) 1929-1963 / Early 20th Century Period
    [Show full text]
  • On Duty at Fort Ridgely, Minnesota: 1853-1867
    Copyright © 1977 by the South Dakota State Historical Society. All Rights Reserved. On Duty at Fort Ridgcly, Minnesota: 1853-1867 PAUL L. HEDREN Fort Ridgely, Minnesota, rests securely in the annals of western American history because of the very significant role it played in the tragic 1862 Sioux Uprising. During the autumn of that year it provided protection for hundreds of homeless and stricken civilians. The post was actually besieged by hostile Indians on several occasions-an act not as common to history as it is to television and movies! And the fort served as a major focal point for the military operations that finaily quelied the Central-Minnesota hostilities. Contrary to most studies on the subject, however, a look at Fort Ridgely should be more than just an examination of the events of 1862.^ An encompassing study of this interesting post should look at the art of soldiering in the Upper Midwest, with all its associated ills and blessings. A study should look at the relationships between the military and civilians at this fort. An investigation of Fort Ridgely should answer numerous ques- tions. Just who served there? Who led those men? How did they dress? What did they accomplish? Ridgely was a vibrant fort, and it does have an interesting history-beyond the year 1862. The need for a military post on the Upper Minnesota River was quickly recognized and urged following the signing in 1851 of treaties with Minnesota bands of Sioux Indians. It was argued that troops should be better positioned to operate offensively 1. The standard approach to Fort Ridgely history has been to briefly examine the construction and use of the post, preparatory to lengthy discussions of the Sioux attacks in 1862, Such studies as Kenneth Carley's Vie Sioux Uprising of 1862 (St.
    [Show full text]
  • Minnesota Statutes 2020, Chapter 85
    1​ MINNESOTA STATUTES 2020​ 85.011​ CHAPTER 85​ DIVISION OF PARKS AND RECREATION​ STATE PARKS, RECREATION AREAS, AND WAYSIDES​ 85.06​ SCHOOLHOUSES IN CERTAIN STATE PARKS.​ 85.011​ CONFIRMATION OF CREATION AND​ 85.20​ VIOLATIONS OF RULES; LITTERING; PENALTIES.​ ESTABLISHMENT OF STATE PARKS, STATE​ 85.205​ RECEPTACLES FOR RECYCLING.​ RECREATION AREAS, AND WAYSIDES.​ 85.21​ STATE OPERATION OF PARK, MONUMENT,​ 85.0115​ NOTICE OF ADDITIONS AND DELETIONS.​ RECREATION AREA AND WAYSIDE FACILITIES;​ 85.012​ STATE PARKS.​ LICENSE NOT REQUIRED.​ 85.013​ STATE RECREATION AREAS AND WAYSIDES.​ 85.22​ STATE PARKS WORKING CAPITAL ACCOUNT.​ 85.014​ PRIOR LAWS NOT ALTERED; REVISOR'S DUTIES.​ 85.23​ COOPERATIVE LEASES OF AGRICULTURAL​ 85.0145​ ACQUIRING LAND FOR FACILITIES.​ LANDS.​ 85.0146​ CUYUNA COUNTRY STATE RECREATION AREA;​ 85.32​ STATE WATER TRAILS.​ CITIZENS ADVISORY COUNCIL.​ 85.33​ ST. CROIX WILD RIVER AREA; LIMITATIONS ON​ STATE TRAILS​ POWER BOATING.​ 85.015​ STATE TRAILS.​ 85.34​ FORT SNELLING LEASE.​ 85.0155​ LAKE SUPERIOR WATER TRAIL.​ TRAIL PASSES​ 85.0156​ MISSISSIPPI WHITEWATER TRAIL.​ 85.40​ DEFINITIONS.​ 85.016​ BICYCLE TRAIL PROGRAM.​ 85.41​ CROSS-COUNTRY-SKI PASSES.​ 85.017​ TRAIL REGISTRY.​ 85.42​ USER FEE; VALIDITY.​ 85.018​ TRAIL USE; VEHICLES REGULATED, RESTRICTED.​ 85.43​ DISPOSITION OF RECEIPTS; PURPOSE.​ ADMINISTRATION​ 85.44​ CROSS-COUNTRY-SKI TRAIL GRANT-IN-AID​ 85.019​ LOCAL RECREATION GRANTS.​ PROGRAM.​ 85.021​ ACQUIRING LAND; MINNESOTA VALLEY TRAIL.​ 85.45​ PENALTIES.​ 85.04​ ENFORCEMENT DIVISION EMPLOYEES.​ 85.46​ HORSE
    [Show full text]
  • Archeological and Bioarcheological Resources of the Northern Plains Edited by George C
    Tri-Services Cultural Resources Research Center USACERL Special Report 97/2 December 1996 U.S. Department of Defense Legacy Resource Management Program U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Construction Engineering Research Laboratory Archeological and Bioarcheological Resources of the Northern Plains edited by George C. Frison and Robert C. Mainfort, with contributions by George C. Frison, Dennis L. Toom, Michael L. Gregg, John Williams, Laura L. Scheiber, George W. Gill, James C. Miller, Julie E. Francis, Robert C. Mainfort, David Schwab, L. Adrien Hannus, Peter Winham, David Walter, David Meyer, Paul R. Picha, and David G. Stanley A Volume in the Central and Northern Plains Archeological Overview Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series No. 47 1996 Arkansas Archeological Survey Fayetteville, Arkansas 1996 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Archeological and bioarcheological resources of the Northern Plains/ edited by George C. Frison and Robert C. Mainfort; with contributions by George C. Frison [et al.] p. cm. — (Arkansas Archeological Survey research series; no. 47 (USACERL special report; 97/2) “A volume in the Central and Northern Plains archeological overview.” Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 1-56349-078-1 (alk. paper) 1. Indians of North America—Great Plains—Antiquities. 2. Indians of North America—Anthropometry—Great Plains. 3. Great Plains—Antiquities. I. Frison, George C. II. Mainfort, Robert C. III. Arkansas Archeological Survey. IV. Series. V. Series: USA-CERL special report: N-97/2. E78.G73A74 1996 96-44361 978’.01—dc21 CIP Abstract The 12,000 years of human occupation in the Northwestern Great Plains states of Montana, Wyoming, North Dakota, and South Dakota is reviewed here.
    [Show full text]
  • Minnesota Statutes 2020, Section 138.662
    1​ MINNESOTA STATUTES 2020​ 138.662​ 138.662 HISTORIC SITES.​ Subdivision 1. Named. Historic sites established and confirmed as historic sites together with the counties​ in which they are situated are listed in this section and shall be named as indicated in this section.​ Subd. 2. Alexander Ramsey House. Alexander Ramsey House; Ramsey County.​ History: 1965 c 779 s 3; 1967 c 54 s 4; 1971 c 362 s 1; 1973 c 316 s 4; 1993 c 181 s 2,13​ Subd. 3. Birch Coulee Battlefield. Birch Coulee Battlefield; Renville County.​ History: 1965 c 779 s 5; 1973 c 316 s 9; 1976 c 106 s 2,4; 1984 c 654 art 2 s 112; 1993 c 181 s 2,13​ Subd. 4. [Repealed, 2014 c 174 s 8]​ Subd. 5. [Repealed, 1996 c 452 s 40]​ Subd. 6. Camp Coldwater. Camp Coldwater; Hennepin County.​ History: 1965 c 779 s 7; 1973 c 225 s 1,2; 1993 c 181 s 2,13​ Subd. 7. Charles A. Lindbergh House. Charles A. Lindbergh House; Morrison County.​ History: 1965 c 779 s 5; 1969 c 956 s 1; 1971 c 688 s 2; 1993 c 181 s 2,13​ Subd. 8. Folsom House. Folsom House; Chisago County.​ History: 1969 c 894 s 5; 1993 c 181 s 2,13​ Subd. 9. Forest History Center. Forest History Center; Itasca County.​ History: 1993 c 181 s 2,13​ Subd. 10. Fort Renville. Fort Renville; Chippewa County.​ History: 1969 c 894 s 5; 1973 c 225 s 3; 1993 c 181 s 2,13​ Subd.
    [Show full text]
  • To Prairie Preserves
    This document is made available electronically by the Minnesota Legislative Reference Library as part of an ongoing digital archiving project. http://www.leg.state.mn.us/lrl/lrl.asp (Funding for document digitization was provided, in part, by a grant from the Minnesota Historical & Cultural Heritage Program.) A GUIDE TO MINNESOTA PRAIRIES By Keith M. Wendt Maps By Judith M. Ja.cobi· Editorial Assistance By Karen A. Schmitz Art and Photo Credits:•Thorn_as ·Arter, p. 14 (bottom left); Kathy Bolin, ·p: 14 (top); Dan Metz, pp. 60, 62; Minnesota Departme'nt of Natural Resources, pp. '35 1 39, 65; U.S. Department of Agriculture, p. -47; Keith Wendt, cover, pp~ 14 (right), 32, 44; Vera Wohg, PP· 22, 43, 4a. · · ..·.' The Natural Heritage Program Minnesota Department of Natural Resources Box 6, Centennial Office Building . ,. St. Paul; MN 55155 ©Copyright 1984, State of Minnesota, Department of Natural Resource.s CONTENTS PREFACE .......................................... Page 3 INTRODUCTION .................................... Page 5 MINNESOTA PRAIRIE TYPES ........................... Page 6 PROTECTION STATUS OF MINNESOTA PRAIRIES ............ Page 12 DIRECTORY OF PRAIRIE PRESERVES BY REGION ............ Page 15 Blufflands . Page 18 Southern Oak Barrens . Page 22 Minnesota River Valley ............................. Page 26 Coteau des Prairies . Page 32 Blue Hills . Page 40 Mississippi River Sand Plains ......................... Page 44 Red River Valley . Page 48 Aspen Parkland ................................... Page 62 REFERENCES ..................................... Page 66 INDEX TO PRAIRIE PRESERVES ......................... Page 70 2 PREFACE innesota has established an outstanding system of tallgrass prairie preserves. No state M in the Upper Midwest surpasses Minnesota in terms of acreage and variety of tallgrass prairie protected. Over 45,000 acres of native prairie are protected on a wide variety of landforms that span the 400 mile length of the state from its southeast to northwest corner.
    [Show full text]
  • A Comparative Study of the Swennes Woven Nettle Bag and Weaving Techniques
    Karoll UW-L Journal of Undergraduate Research XII (2009) A Comparative Study of the Swennes Woven Nettle Bag and Weaving Techniques Amy Karol Faculty Sponsors: Dr. Connie Arzigian and Dr. David Anderson, Department of Sociology and Archaeology ABSTRACT During recent years, the Mississippi Valley Archaeology Center (MVAC) has acquired permission to look at a beautifully preserved bag from 47Lc84, a rockshelter located in La Crosse County, Wisconsin. The bag is tentatively dated to the Oneota cultural tradition (A.D. 1250-1650) based on pottery sherds associated with it. Nothing of its kind has been found archaeologically in this region before, owing mostly to poor preservation conditions. Due to its uniqueness, there is nothing to compare it to within the Oneota tradition. Therefore, to gain a better understanding of this bag, a cross-cultural study was undertaken. This paper examines separate sites in the American Midwest, as well as textile impressions that are preserved on pottery, the ethnohistoric and early historic record, and modern hand-weaving techniques to determine the textile tradition from which the bag may have emerged as well as how it was constructed. INTRODUCTION Textiles in the archaeological record are poorly preserved in the American Midwest. Only in very few sites are they actually found, and in even fewer are the fragments large enough to be studied in depth. Detailed studies conducted on textiles are not numerous. Lacking in these studies is a cross-cultural comparison of types and materials from sites that do have better preserved textiles to try and determine similarities and differences in textile manufacture.
    [Show full text]
  • Plains Anthropologist Author Index
    Author Index AUTHOR INDEX Aaberg, Stephen A. (see Shelley, Phillip H. and George A. Agogino) 1983 Plant Gathering as a Settlement Determinant at the Pilgrim Stone Circle Site. In: Memoir 19. Vol. 28, No. (see Smith, Calvin, John Runyon, and George A. Agogino) 102, pp. 279-303. (see Smith, Shirley and George A. Agogino) Abbott, James T. Agogino, George A. and Al Parrish 1988 A Re-Evaluation of Boulderflow as a Relative Dating 1971 The Fowler-Parrish Site: A Folsom Campsite in Eastern Technique for Surficial Boulder Features. Vol. 33, No. Colorado. Vol. 16, No. 52, pp. 111-114. 119, pp. 113-118. Agogino, George A. and Eugene Galloway Abbott, Jane P. 1963 Osteology of the Four Bear Burials. Vol. 8, No. 19, pp. (see Martin, James E., Robert A. Alex, Lynn M. Alex, Jane P. 57-60. Abbott, Rachel C. Benton, and Louise F. Miller) 1965 The Sister’s Hill Site: A Hell Gap Site in North-Central Adams, Gary Wyoming. Vol. 10, No. 29, pp. 190-195. 1983 Tipi Rings at York Factory: An Archaeological- Ethnographic Interface. In: Memoir 19. Vol. 28, No. Agogino, George A. and Sally K. Sachs 102, pp. 7-15. 1960 Criticism of the Museum Orientation of Existing Antiquity Laws. Vol. 5, No. 9, pp. 31-35. Adovasio, James M. (see Frison, George C., James M. Adovasio, and Ronald C. Agogino, George A. and William Sweetland Carlisle) 1985 The Stolle Mammoth: A Possible Clovis Kill-Site. Vol. 30, No. 107, pp. 73-76. Adovasio, James M., R. L. Andrews, and C. S. Fowler 1982 Some Observations on the Putative Fremont Agogino, George A., David K.
    [Show full text]
  • The Campground Host Volunteer Program
    CAMPGROUND HOST PROGRAM THE CAMPGROUND HOST VOLUNTEER PROGRAM MINNESOTA DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES 1 CAMPGROUND HOST PROGRAM DIVISION OF PARKS AND RECREATION Introduction This packet is designed to give you the information necessary to apply for a campground host position. Applications will be accepted all year but must be received at least 30 days in advance of the time you wish to serve as a host. Please send completed applications to the park manager for the park or forest campground in which you are interested. Addresses are listed at the back of this brochure. General questions and inquiries may be directed to: Campground Host Coordinator DNR-Parks and Recreation 500 Lafayette Road St. Paul, MN 55155-4039 651-259-5607 [email protected] Principal Duties and Responsibilities During the period from May to October, the volunteer serves as a "live in" host at a state park or state forest campground for at least a four-week period. The primary responsibility is to assist campers by answering questions and explaining campground rules in a cheerful and helpful manner. Campground Host volunteers should be familiar with state park and forest campground rules and should become familiar with local points of interest and the location where local services can be obtained. Volunteers perform light maintenance work around the campground such as litter pickup, sweeping, stocking supplies in toilet buildings and making emergency minor repairs when possible. Campground Host volunteers may be requested to assist in the naturalist program by posting and distributing schedules, publicizing programs or helping with programs. Volunteers will set an example by being model campers, practicing good housekeeping at all times in and around the host site, and by observing all rules.
    [Show full text]
  • Minnesota State Parks.Pdf
    Table of Contents 1. Afton State Park 4 2. Banning State Park 6 3. Bear Head Lake State Park 8 4. Beaver Creek Valley State Park 10 5. Big Bog State Park 12 6. Big Stone Lake State Park 14 7. Blue Mounds State Park 16 8. Buffalo River State Park 18 9. Camden State Park 20 10. Carley State Park 22 11. Cascade River State Park 24 12. Charles A. Lindbergh State Park 26 13. Crow Wing State Park 28 14. Cuyuna Country State Park 30 15. Father Hennepin State Park 32 16. Flandrau State Park 34 17. Forestville/Mystery Cave State Park 36 18. Fort Ridgely State Park 38 19. Fort Snelling State Park 40 20. Franz Jevne State Park 42 21. Frontenac State Park 44 22. George H. Crosby Manitou State Park 46 23. Glacial Lakes State Park 48 24. Glendalough State Park 50 25. Gooseberry Falls State Park 52 26. Grand Portage State Park 54 27. Great River Bluffs State Park 56 28. Hayes Lake State Park 58 29. Hill Annex Mine State Park 60 30. Interstate State Park 62 31. Itasca State Park 64 32. Jay Cooke State Park 66 33. John A. Latsch State Park 68 34. Judge C.R. Magney State Park 70 1 35. Kilen Woods State Park 72 36. Lac qui Parle State Park 74 37. Lake Bemidji State Park 76 38. Lake Bronson State Park 78 39. Lake Carlos State Park 80 40. Lake Louise State Park 82 41. Lake Maria State Park 84 42. Lake Shetek State Park 86 43.
    [Show full text]
  • Narratives of the Career of Hernando De Soto in the Conquest of Florida
    iâratrforír ©Iuí> feries. NUMBER FIVE. ***Or*n ' i j DE 3DT0. wed for the Bradford Club NewYork L365 NARRATIVES OF THE CAREER OF HERNANDO DE SOTO CONQUEST OF FLORIDA AS TOLD Bf A KNIGHT OF ELYAS ANJ) IN A RELATION BY FACTOll OF THE EXPEDITION TRANSLATED BY BUCKINGHAM SMITH N E W Y O R K M DCCC LXVI ^/éz+cyti (í? / ,S 7^5-7 copy & SUBSCRIBERS COPY, Ao. _C^, Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1866, By John B. Moreau, FOE THE BRADFORD CLUB, In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for the Southern District of New York. IP ^hi> SEVENTY-FIVE COPIES PRINTED. TO JOHN EARL WILLIAMS, A MEMENTO OF A FRIENDSHIP WHICH, BEGUN IN YOUTH, HAS STRENGTHENED WITH ADVANCING TEARS. — THE BRADFORD CLUB. Under this designation, a few gentlemen, interested in the study of American History and Literature, propose occasionally to print limited editions of such manuscripts and scarce pamphlets as may be deemed of value towards illustrating these subjects. They will seek to obtain for this purpose unpublished journals or corre- spondence containing matter worthy of record, and which may not properly be included in the Historical Collections or Documentary Histories of the several States. Such unpretending contemporary chronicles often throw precious light upon the motives of action and the imperfectly narrated events of bygone days; perhaps briefly touched upon in dry official documents. The Club may also issue fac-similes of curious manuscripts, or documents worthy of notice, which, like, the printed issues, will bear its imprint.
    [Show full text]