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Böcker i Classics in Southeastern Archaeology-serien

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  • av Clarence Bloomfield Moore
    521

    The two works included in this volume represent the pinacle of the career of Clarence Bloomfield Moore. It includes ""Certain Aboriginal Remains of the Black Warrior River"" (1905) and ""Moundville Revisited"" (1907), which brought the Moundville site in Alabama to the attention of the scholarly world.

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    507

    This volume explains the deep influence of biological methods and theories on the practice of Americanist archaeology by exploring W.C. McKern's use of Linnaean taxonomy as the model for development of a pottery classification system.

  • - Ocmulgee National Monument, Georgia
    av Charles H. Fairbanks
    277

    In this work of archaeological research and analysis, Charles Fairbanks not only offers a full treatment of the cultural development and lifeways of the builders of Ocmulgee but also relates them effectively to other known cultures of the prehistoric Southeast.

  • av Clarence Bloomfield Moore
    721

    This oversized reprint volume presents original materials from Clarence Bloomfield Moore's northermost expeditions conducted in the early 1900s as he surveyed areas of potential archaeological interest in the southeastern United States.

  • av Carol I. Mason
    381

    Carol I. Mason's study of the Ocmulgee Old Fields site has been a model for contact-period Indian archaeology since the 1960s. The report includes a discussion of the historic setting and an analysis of the archaeological materials with an identification of the Lower Creek town and possibly of the English trader who lived there.

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    721

    Clarence Bloomfield Moore, a Victorian natural scientist and adventurer, spent 25 years documenting archaeological sites along the waterways in the southeastern United States. This volume is a collection of works that describe data from Moore's investigations of the Lower Mississippi Valley.

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    617

    This compilation of Clarence Bloomfield Moore's publications on East Florida provides all of his archaeological data on the region's mounds and prehistoric canals in a single volume. The author describes and analyzes Moore's work in East Florida, summarizing the sites Moore investigated.

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    617

    This compilation of Clarence Bloomfield Moore's publications on western and central Florida provides all of his archaeological data on the region's mounds and prehistoric canals in a single volume.

  •  
    721

    This compilation of Moore's archaeological reports on northwest Florida and southern Alabama and Georgia. His expeditions from 1901 to 1918 shed light on 2000 years of indigenous peoples. The editors' introduction contextualizes the investigations in the science and natural history of his day.

  • av Warren King Moorehead
    521

    This is a report of archaeological investigations conducted at Cahokia from 1921 to 1927 by Warren Moorehead, who confirmed that the mounds were built by indigenous people and who worked to assure preservation of the site. It includes his 1929 report along with portions of two preliminary reports.

  • av Philip Phillips, James B. Griffin & James A. Ford
    641

    The purpose of the Lower Mississippi Survey (LMS) - a term used to identify both the fieldwork and this resultant volume - was to investigate the northern two-thirds of the alluvial valley of the Mississippi river, to develop an understanding of the archaeology of the area.

  • av Stephen Williams & Henry Clyde Shetrone
    571

    In this title, Henry Clyde Shetrone made available to general readers the archaeological research data and conclusions concerning the ancient mounds and earthworks that dot the landscape of eastern North America. He explained that their purposes were defensive and ceremonial, that they had been used for habitation, burial, and worship.

  • av Ales Hrdlicka
    451

    Constitutes the summary of anthropological information on Florida. This book considers previous research on Florida archaeology, physical anthropology, and aboriginal history. It also contains Hrdlicka's analysis of every human bone from Florida that he could find in collections.

  • av Gordon R. Willey
    501

    This is a facsimile reprint of a 1958 title. It outlines the state of American archaeology at that time. It suggests that little interpretation was taking in place in American Archaeology, and offered an analytical perspective.

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