French Colonial (Culture Keyword)

101-125 (157 Records)

Glass Bead Image File Join Table (2015)
DATASET Heather Walder.

This is a two-column spreadsheet listing the name of each *.jpg of all glass beads and pendants examined in the study. They are listed along with the sample ID of each artifact. The images themselves will be uploaded into a separate *.pdf. The complete Filemaker Pro 13 glass bead database, which includes artifact provenience information, images, and compositional analysis results obtained with LA-ICP-MS is available from the author upon request. This is a *.fmp12 file type, which is not...


Glass Beads from Old Mobile Structure 01 (1MB94), Mobile County, Alabama. (1989)
DATASET Gregory Waselkov. Diane Silvia.

Glass beads recovered from Structure 01 at the Old Mobile Site (1MB94).


Glass Beads from Old Mobile Structure 02 (1MB94), Mobile County, Alabama. (1990)
DATASET Gregory Waselkov. Diane Silvia.

Glass beads recovered from Structure 02 at the Old Mobile Site (1MB94).


Glass Beads from the Augustin Rochon Plantation (1BA337), Baldwin County, Alabama. (2000)
DATASET Gregory Waselkov. Bonnie L. Gums.

Glass beads recovered from the Augustin Rochon Plantation (1BA337).


Glass Beads from the Dog River Plantation (1MB161), Mobile County, Alabama. (2000)
DATASET Gregory Waselkov. Diane Silvia. Bonnie L. Gums. George W. Shorter, Jr..

Glass trade beads recovered from the Dog River Plantation (1MB161) site.


Glass Beads from the Indian House site (1MB147) near the Old Mobile site (1MB94), Mobile County, Alabama. (1995)
DATASET Gregory Waselkov. Diane Silvia.

A collection of glass beads recovered from the Indian House site (1MB147) near the Old Mobile site (1MB94).


Glass Beads from the Port Dauphin site (1MB221), Mobile County, Alabama. (1997)
DATASET Gregory Waselkov. George W. Shorter, Jr.. Bonnie L. Gums.

Glass beads recovered from the Port Dauphin site (1MB221).


House and Excavation Photos from the La Pointe-Krebs House Site (22JA526), Pascagoula, Mississippi. (2010)
IMAGE Bonnie L. Gums. Gregory Waselkov.

A collection of photos from the La Pointe-Krebs House site from the 2010 excavations, plus one sherd with embedded glass beads.


Jesuits in New France/Religious Discoveries at Fort St. Joseph Panels (2009)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Victoria Hawley.

Two interpretive panels created for the 2009 Fort St. Joseph Archaeological Project Open House discussing religious life in New France and the material remains of beliefs at Fort St. Joseph.


La Pointe-Krebs House (22JA526), Pascagoula, Mississippi.
PROJECT Gregory Waselkov.

The LaPointe-Krebs House or "Old Spanish Fort" (archaeological site 22JA526) in Pascagoula, Mississippi, is evidently the oldest standing structure in that state. Archaeological test excavations in and adjacent to the house in 1979, 1992, and 1994, 1995, and 2010 have revealed a complex sequence of colonial-period occupation and building on that site. Apart from some sporadic prehistoric occupation during the Middle Woodland period about two millennia ago, the major occupation occurred between...


Magnetometry Data - 2/20/2003 (2003)
DATASET William Sauck.

Raw data from survey.


Magnetometry Data - 6/5/2002 (2002)
DATASET William Sauck.

Raw data from survey.


Magnetometry Data - 6/6/2002 (2002)
DATASET William Sauck.

Raw data from survey.


Magnetometry Data - 7/3/2002 (2002)
DATASET William Sauck.

Raw data from survey.


Magnetometry Map (2004)
DOCUMENT Full-Text William Sauck.

Composite map depicting results of 2002 and 2003 magnetometry surveys.


Material Culture of an 18th-Century Gulf Coast Plantation; the Augustin Rochon Plantation, ca. 1750s-1780, Baldwin County, Alabama. (2000)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Bonnie L. Gums.

Southwestern Alabama's colonial history is represented by the sites of native settlements and colonial forts, villages, and river plantations that spanned the French (1699-1763), British (1763-1780) and Spanish (1780-1813) periods. In the eighteenth century, over 60 plantations were established along the major waterways around Mobile, but fewer than ten have been identified as archaeological sites, and excavation has occured at only four. Unfortunately, many of the historic sites around Mobile...


Mdewakanton Dakota and Initial French Contact (1992)
DOCUMENT Citation Only D. A. Birk. E. Johnson.

This resource is a citation record only, the Center for Digital Antiquity does not have a copy of this document. The information in this record has been migrated into tDAR from the National Archaeological Database Reports Module (NADB-R) and updated. Most NADB-R records consist of a document citation and other metadata but do not have the documents themselves uploaded. If you have a digital copy of the document and would like to have it curated in tDAR, please contact us at comments@tdar.org.


Media Day (2010)
IMAGE Barbara Cook. Victoria Hawley. Jessica Hughes.

Photographs from 2008, 2009, and 2010 Media Days at the site of Fort St. Joseph during which the press and members of the Western Michigan University and Niles communities and other involved parties were invited to experience talks and tours prior to the opening of the site to the public for the annual Archaeology Open House.


Metal Artifact Attribute Dataset (2015)
DATASET Heather Walder.

This spreadsheet was exported from the Filemaker Pro database and contains all of the information contained in that database except the images. The join table of image filenames linked to database ID for artifacts is uploaded as a separate file, as is a pdf of the database including the images associated with each record. A fully functional copy of the database (created in Filemaker Pro 13) is available from the author upon request. The Filemaker database filetype (*.fmp12) is not supported by...


Metal Artifact Attribute Dataset Image Join Table (2015)
DATASET Heather Walder.

This is a two-column spreadsheet that lists the name of each image file (*.jpg) associated with each artifact in the metal attribute database. Artifacts are sorted by their database ID (HW-00001 to HW-03410). The actual image files are saved in a Filemaker Pro database, available upon request. Individual artifact images may be located using the database ID number in this table and requested from the author.


Notes to Accompany the Fort St. Joseph, Niles, Michigan Magnetic Survey Data (2004)
DOCUMENT Full-Text William Sauck.

Explains raw data contained in Excel spreadsheets.


Old Mobile (1MB147) Indian House, Mobile County, Alabama.
PROJECT Gregory Waselkov.

In 1994-1996 the University of South Alabama's Center for Archaeological Studies excavated the site of an Indian House (1MB147) near the Old Mobile Site (1MB94). The two sites were contemporaneous, with occupations between 1702 and 1711. Old Mobile was the French capital of the colony of Louisiane. Site 1MB147, known as the Indian House, was a domestic dwelling occupied by Native Americans, perhaps Mobilians, situated immediately across a swamp that delimited the western extent of Old Mobile....


Old Mobile (1MB94) Fort Louis, Mobile County, Alabama.
PROJECT Gregory Waselkov.

After an intensive remote sensing effort in 2005 failed to identify remains of Fort Louis at the Old Mobile site (1MB94), a large pit feature associated with one of the fort's bastions was found in that search area by hand excavation. This feature and adjacent units were excavated in 2007-2010.


Old Mobile (1MB94) Site Overview, Mobile County, Alabama.
PROJECT Gregory Waselkov.

This section provides an overview of archaeological research on the site of Old Mobile (1MB94), French colonial capital of La Louisiane from 1702 to 1711. While the general location of Twenty-seven Mile Bluff on the Mobile River, in modern-day southwestern Alabama, has always been known as the original French colonial townsite, archaeological research only began there in earnest in 1989 when James C. "Buddy" Parnell, an employee of Courtaulds Fibers Inc. recognized several well-preserved earthen...


Old Mobile (1MB94) Structure 01, Mobile County, Alabama.
PROJECT Gregory Waselkov.

Structure 1 at the Old Mobile site (1MB94) was first noted for its raised earthen floor. Several similar features were visible in the forested, unplowed, western half of the townsite. Complete excavation in 1989 revealed the building to have been built using poteaux-sur-sole, or post on sill, construction. This building had a large central room with three joists supporting a wooden floor. On each end was a smaller room, one of which shared a double-hearth chimney with the central room. The long...