Thunderbird (mythology)
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- By the End of the Archaic Period (Around 500 B.C.), Early Indigenous People Had Begun to Develop Distinct Familial and Tribal Id
- Archaeological Analysis of an Early Mississippian Frontier Structure in Southwestern Virginia
- The Archaeology of Kentucky: an Update
- MOHICAN SEMINAR 3 Sitting for a Portrait in 1735, Tishcohan, a Delaware Chief, Wore a Deco- Rated Tobacco Pouch Made of Flying Squirrel Skin, a Symbol of Flight
- Interpreting Oneota and Mississipppian Interaction Through Paleoethnobotanical Analysis at the Morton Village Site (11F2), West-Central Illinois
- Oneota Interaction in the Central and Northeastern Plains Benjamin Shirar
- (13CK402): a Mill Creek Culture Occupation in Northwest Iowa. Hilary Jayne Powell Iowa State University
- Native American Mythology Cylinder
- The Star-Beings and Stones: Petroforms and the Reflection of Native American Cosmology, Myth and Stellar Traditions Herman E
- Geometric Motifs in Great Lakes Indian Costume
- An Analysis of Textile-Impressed Ceramics from Slack Farm (15Un28), Kentucky
- Panthers and Thunderbirds Twined Bags, Fabric-Impressed Ceramics, and the Great Tradition of American Fabrics
- Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes
- Then and Now: Asserting Anishinabek Identity Through Indigenized Apparel