New Mill Creek Site (original) (raw)

Another Look at the Town Creek Mound

North Carolina Archaeology, 2014

In this paper, I outline and compare the individual contexts that make up the mound at the Town Creek site (31Mg2-3). The main objective of this research was to determine what activities may have been associated with the mound by looking at five different contexts: a premound midden, a premound earth-embanked structure, two mound-flank middens, and a mound summit deposit. These contexts were differentiated stratigraphically and spatially in the hope that a diachronic view of activities associated with mound contexts could be determined. In order to compare these contexts, abundance indices (adapted from Knight 2004, 2010) for artifact classes were calculated by weighting raw artifact counts by ceramic sherd and debitage density. While only a broad explanation of activities could be derived from this analysis, some interesting interpretations can be drawn.

An Archaeological Survey of Newton County: Enhancement of a Data Deficient Region, Part II Grant # 18-15FFY-05

Reports of Investigation, 2016

The Applied Anthropology Laboratories (AAL) at Ball State University conducted a data enhancement project for archaeological resources in Newton County, Indiana for a FY2015 Historic Preservation Fund Grant (Grant #18-15FFY-05). This Historic Preservation Fund grant project investigated the archaeological resources of Newton County, Indiana with a focus on the Kankakee River, Beaver Lake, and the northern half of the county. Approximately 856.1 acres (346.45 hectares) of agricultural land were surveyed, which includes 7.1 acres of resurveyed area, and 76 new archaeological sites were recorded. The survey recovered 525 prehistoric artifacts and 1,761 historic artifacts from nine parcels of land within Newton County. No human remains were discovered as a result of this grant project. Cultural periods that are represented in the artifact assemblage include Early Archaic, Late Archaic, Late Archaic/Early Woodland, Late Woodland/Late Prehistoric, and Late Prehistoric components that were documented from the precontact era, in addition to Historic components. The average site density recorded for the project area for precontact sites was one site per 42.45 acres and for Historic sites was one site per 13.69 acres.

J. Ashley Sibley, Jr. and the Junior Archeological Society: Assessing Avocational Archaeology at the Smith Creek Site (22WK526)

Louisiana Archaeology, 2020

The Junior Archeological Society (JAS), operating in Baton Rouge from the 1950s to the 1970s, provided opportunities for middle and high school students to study and practice archaeology. The group, headed by teacher and avocational archaeologist J. Ashley Sibley, Jr., focused on nearby prehistoric Native American sites including investigations at the Smith Creek site (22WK526) in Wilkinson County, Mississippi. Using interviews with former members, accounts and records of the JAS, and analysis of recently rediscovered artifacts resulting from its excavations at the Smith Creek site, the authors discuss the JAS and the importance of its investigations to current understandings of the site. This case study emphasizes the value of continued collaboration between professional and avocational archaeologists.

Viewing Jonathan Creek Through Ceramics and Radiocarbon Dates: Regional Prominence in the Thirteenth Century

TVA Archaeology: Seventy-five Years of Prehistoric Site Research, 2009

•LARGE jONATHAN CREEK SITE, located in western Kentucky (Figure was partially excavated in the early I940s with Civilian Conser-Corps (CCC) labor in collaboration with the Tennessee Valley tuthority (TVA), which sponsored survey and large-scale excavations the valley in advance of dam construction projects (Milner •Smith I986:rr-12; Lyon I996; Schroeder 2oos:ss-s6; Tennessee Authority I983; Webb I952; see chapter I, this volume). The Creek project was conducted under the direction of WilliamS. who, from his office at the University of Kentucky in Lexington than 250 miles away, kept up with activities at the site through :correspondence with the site supervisors, Harold F. Dahms, James R. Glenn E. Martin, and Joseph Spears. The site attracted Webb's because of seven earthen mounds, which were first documented late nineteenth century (Figure 6. 2; Loughridge I 8 8 8). Six of these were located on the terrace and arranged around an open plaza, uvuuing to a layout typical of Mississippian town-and-mound centers the Southeast (Lewis and Stout I988). The seventh mound was nearby in the floodplain of Jonathan Creek. The plan had been 'i>vravate the site in its entirety, but excavations terminated premaon March 20, I 942, when the CCC crew and site supervisors were R. BERLE Ceramic Complexes of the Tennessee-Cumberland Region in Western Kentucky. M.A. thesis,

Excavations at the Clark's Point Site (12-Cl-3), Clark County, Indiana (2004)

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