DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» Coosa chiefdom
Coosa chiefdom
From the Mouths of Mississippian: Determining Biological Affinity Between the Oliver Site (22-Co-503) and the Hollywood Site (22-Tu-500)
7 Burial Descriptions
Proquest Dissertations
Federal Register/Vol. 79, No. 11/Thursday, January 16, 2014
Yuchi Indian Histories Before the Removal Era
The Social Networks and Structural Variation of Mississippian Sociopolitics in the Southeastern SEE COMMENTARY United States
Materials of Conquest: a Study Using Portable X-Ray Fluorescence
Preliminary Pages
BALMNH No 15 1993.Pdf
New Insights Into Spanish-Native Relations During the Luna Expedition, 1559-1561
Captives of the Dark and Bloody Ground: Identity, Race, and Power in the Contested American South
The Distribution of Eastern Woodlands and Historic Interface
Vengeance with Mercy: Changing Traditions and Traditional Practices of Colonial Yamasees
Historical Memory, Indianness, and the Tellico Dam Project a DISSERTATION SUBMITTED to the FACULTY O
Bridging History and Prehistory: General Reflections and Particular Quandries
Tennessee Archaeology Draft
Apalachee Agency on the Gulf Coast Frontier
HOUSEHOLD RESEARCH at the LATE MISSISSIPPIAN LITTLE EGYPT SITE (9MU102) by RAMIE ALPHONSE GOUGEON (Under the Direction of Dr. Da
Top View
Sixteenth-Century Mechanisms of Exchange David J
A Witness Tree Analysis of the Effects of Native American Indians on the Pre-European Settlement Forests in East-Central Alabama
Coosa Compare?
Dissertation
The Creek Indians and Community Politics in the Native South, 1753-1821
II. Research Methods
Using Osteological Evidence to Assess Biological Affinity: a Re- Evaluation of Selected Sites in East Tennessee
Tennessee Archaeology
Stylistic Analysis of Burial Urns from the Protohistoric Period in Central Alabama
INFORM ATION to USERS the Quality of This Reproduction Is
“You Have Guns and So Have We…” an Ethnohistoric Analysis of Creek and Seminole Combat Behaviors
Biological Affinities and the Construction of Cultural Identity for the Proposed Coosa Chiefdom