Historic Native American (Culture Keyword)

Historic Native Americans , Native Americans , Historical Native Americans

Parent: Historic

676-700 (810 Records)

Posey (18CH281): Copper Scraps (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Copper scraps


Posey (18CH281): Drawing of Metal Points (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Drawing of metal points


Posey (18CH281): European Ceramics (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: European ceramics


Posey (18CH281): Finished and Unfinished Beads (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Finished and unfinished beads


Posey (18CH281): General Site Map (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

General site map


Posey (18CH281): Glass Bottle Base (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Glass bottle base


Posey (18CH281): Gunflint (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Gunflint


Posey (18CH281): Iron Knife (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Iron knife


Posey (18CH281): LE Pipe (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: LE pipe


Posey (18CH281): Lead Button (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Lead button


Posey (18CH281): Lead Shot and Musket Ball (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Lead shot and musket ball


Posey (18CH281): Nails (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Nails


Posey (18CH281): Painted Glass Button (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Painted glass button


Posey (18CH281): Pipes (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Pipes


Posey (18CH281): Possible Gun Part (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Possible gun part


Posey (18CH281): Projectile Points (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Projectile points


Posey (18CH281): Quartz Points (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Two quartz points


The Pottery of the American Indian (1953)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Edward J. Wahla.

This resource was written to accompany an exhibition by the Michigan Archaeological Society at the Dearborn Historical Museum. It describes Great Lakes Indian pottery making techniques, as well as uses of ceramic pottery in everyday life for the Native Americans of Michigan.


Pre-Columbian Burial Rites: Burial Practice Among Prehistoric Native Americans: Midwest Region, Volume III (2014)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Barbara Ladwig.

Volume III of the PRE-COLUMBIAN BURIAL RITES series analyzes prehistoric mortuary practice in the Midwest Region of North America. The database consists of 32,998 individuals from 1,304 burial sites and covers the period from approximately 9000 B. P. until A. D. 1500. The region by now comprised of the following states: Minnesota, Iowa, Missouri, Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, and Ohio. The provinces are analyzed individually by prehistoric period, then the analysis is followed by...


Pre-Columbian Burial Rites: Burial Practice Among Prehistoric Native Americans: Southeast Region, Volume IV (2014)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Barbara Ladwig.

Volume IV of the PRE-COLUMBIAN BURIAL RITES series consists of a comprehensive examination and discussion of specific mortuary behaviors and characteristics utilized by the prehistoric inhabitants of the Southeast Region of North America. The study of burial practice is useful to the discussion of the complexities of population traits because on a societal scale, similarity or differentiation of patterning in the disposal of the dead has been considered one of the basic identifying "signatures"...


Pre-Columbian Burial Rites: Mortuary Practice Among Prehistoric North Americans: Plains Region, Volume II (2014)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Barbara Ladwig.

Mortuary Practice Among Prehistoric North Americans: Plains Region, is Volume II of the five volume set entitled PRE-COLUMBIAN BURIAL RITES. Twelve years of research that covered North America between the Rockies and the Appalachians provided a comprehensive multi-regional database consisting of 97,821 deceased individuals from 3,678 prehistoric burial sites. From that database I formulated a Plains region database consisting of 13,104 deceased individuals from 1,229 burial sites within Montana,...


Pre-Columbian Burial Rites: Mortuary Practice Among Prehistoric North Americans: Southwest Region (2014)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Barbara Ladwig.

Volume I of the PRE-COLUMBIAN BURIAL RITES series consists of a comprehensive examination and discussion of mortuary behaviors by the prehistoric inhabitants of the Southwest Region of North America. The study of burial practice is useful to the discussion of the complexities of population traits and characteristics because on a societal scale, similarity or differentiation of patterning in the disposal of the dead has been considered one of the basic identifying "signatures" used to distinguish...


Prehistoric Hunter-Fisher-Gatherers: Implications from Ethnohistory (1975)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Francis McManamon.

Large portions of the world once were occupied by human populations subsisting by hunting, fishing and the gathering of wild plants. Archeologists have long been interested in understanding and explaining the life ways of these prehistoric populations. Human cultural evolution having proceeded as it did, almost no written records exist that report on human populations pursuing such a way of life in deciduous and boreal forestlands exist. This is unfortunate for ethnographic analogy, when...


Prehistoric Land Use on Outer Cape Cod (1982)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Francis McManamon.

Preliminary analysis of archaeological survey data indicates that prehistoric land use of coastal southern New England (represented by outer Cape Cod, Massachusetts) was year-round and more diverse than has been suggested by the traditional emphasis on coastal shell middens. Prehistoric settlement seems to have been concentrated mainly in a few locations with large intervening unsettled areas. A stratified random sampling strategy allowed estimates of the relative frequency of different kinds...


A Preliminary Report of Investigation in the Upper Mississinewa Valley Relating to the Battle of Mississinewa, 1812 (1975)
DOCUMENT Full-Text B. K. Swartz, Jr..

Though concerned agencies and archaeologists throughout the state were previously informed Ball State officials did not learn until the spring of 1975 that an appropriation of $25,000.00, proposed by State Representative Loren E. Winger, Converse, Indiana, for Ball State University to conduct research under the jurisdiction of the Indiana State Department of Natural Resources along the Mississinewa River in Grant and Wabash counties was being considered by the state legislature. The purpose of...