Shell Ring Complex (Site Name Keyword)
1-10 (10 Records)
In 2004, University of Kentucky archaeologists started a new research project designed to assess the nature, intensity, and extent of Mission period activity in and around Shell Ring II in the northern portion of the Sapelo Shell Ring complex (9Mc23) (Jefferies and Thompson 2005) (Figure 3). We have employed a diversified data recovery strategy incorporating geophysical survey, shovel probing, soil auguring, metal detector survey, and test unit excavation (Jefferies and Moore 2009).
Electrical Imaging at the Sapelo Island Shell Ring
The electrical resistivity pseudosection provides information about variation in soil moisture content and texture at multiple depths along a vertical axis through the ground. A series of pseudosections were collected on Ring 3 at the Sapelo Island Shell Ring site. These show both horizontal and vertical changes in the ring composition. Two-dimensional inversion of these pseudosections suggests that Ring 3 is made up of discrete concentrations of shell rather than layered shell ani soil.
EVALUATING MOBILITY, MONUMENTALITY, AND FEASTING AT THE SAPELO ISLAND SHELL RING COMPLEX (2008)
Two of the most salient anthropological questions regarding Southeastern shell ring sites are related to the season(s) that they were occupied and whether or not the deposits represent monumental constructions and/or feasting remains. This paper addresses these questions through the analysis growth band of clams (Mercenaria spp.) and stable oxygen isotope ratios of clam and oyster shells (Crassostrea virginica) at the Sapelo Island Shell Ring complex located on the Georgia coast, USA. The...
Protection of the Shell Ring Archaeological Site on the North End of Sapelo Island (1991)
Correspondence about increased visitation to the Shell Ring site
THE SAPELO SHELL RING COMPLEX: SHALLOW GEOPHYSICS ON A GEORGIA SEA ISLAND (2004)
The Sapelo Shell Ring complex, located on Sapelo Island, Georgia, consists of three large circular shell mounds and numerous smaller amorphous shell middens. Today, one of the rings is highly visible; however, the two other rings and the nonring middens have little surface relief and are virtually invisible. In fact, the location and very existence of the two other rings has been debated for some time. Recent geophysical survey, however, has located the subsurface remains of the two...
Sapelo Island
Sapelo Island Project
Sapelo Island: Chronological Position of Shell Rings - Proposed Research for Summer 2006 (2006)
Proposed Research for Testing Project of Sapelo Island Shell Project
Sapelo Island: Early Hunter-Gatherer Pottery along the Atlantic Coast of the Southeastern United States: A Ceramic Compositional Study (2008)
Excavations at the Sapelo Island Shell Ring complex in Georgia produced a voluminous assemblage of St Simons pottery and a small amount of pottery that appears to be of the Thorn's Creek type. Known mainly from South Carolina, Thorn's Creek ceramics have not been found this far south along the Georgia Coast (Williams and Thompson 1999:125-126). In this study, we investigate whether the ceramics found at Sapelo are more closely related to South ...
Sapelo Shells Yield Clues to Ancient People (2007)
Newspaper Article - Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Working Papers on the Sapelo Shell Ring _ Site (9Mcl23): Geophysics, Ceramic. Analysis, and Zooarchaeology (2005)
Working Papers on the Sapelo Shell Ring _ Site (9Mcl23): Geophysics, Ceramic. Analysis, and Zooarchaeology