Late Caddoan period (Temporal Keyword)

1-3 (3 Records)

The Burnitt Site: A Late Caddoan Occupation in the Uplands of the Sabine River Basin in Louisiana (2006)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Bryan S. Haley. Donald G. Hunter. Katherine M. Roberts. Susan L. Scott.

This report presents the results of archaeological data recovery excavations conducted by Coastal Environments, Inc., at the Burnitt site (16SA204) located in the uplands of northern Sabine Parish, Louisiana. The work was conducted under contract to the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development as mitigation for the adverse impact of widening U.S. Highway 171. Test excavations conducted by Gulf Engineers and Consultants in 1994 determined that the site was eligible for the National...


ORGANIC RESIDUE (FTIR) ANALYSIS OF CERAMICS FROM SITE 41CP220, CAMP COUNTY, TEXAS (2012)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Melissa K. Logan. Linda Scott Cummings.

Site 41CP220, located in Camp County, Texas, is a multicomponent site with occupations spanning Paleoindian through Historic periods. This study focuses on organic residue analysis of 20 ceramic sherds recovered primarily from Late Caddo (Titus Phase) contexts. Samples were collected from locations both inside a house and from various outside locations. Samples were examined for organic residues using Fourier Transform Infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR). This analysis provides information concerning...


Peering Through the Sands of Time, The Archeology of the Caddo at the Kitchen Branch Site (41CP220) in East Texas (2014)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Mason D. Miller. Timothy K. Perttula. Rachel J. Feit.

Beginning in 2004, archeologists working on behalf of the Texas Department of Transportation conducted several phases of investigations at the Kitchen Branch site (41CP220) in northeast Texas’ Camp County. The Kitchen Branch site, situated on the northern bank of the Kitchen Branch of Prairie Creek (the site’s namesake), was located within the footprint of a proposed bridge slated for construction during expansion of FM 557 and would (within the expansion area) be destroyed as a result. For...