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1

Fagette, Paul H. "The Founding of the Arkansas Archeological Survey." Arkansas Historical Quarterly 53, no. 3 (1994): 290. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/40030887.

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Vehik, Rain. "Contributions to Ozark Prehistory. George SaboIII , editor. Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series No. 27, W. Fredrick Limp, series editor. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville, 1986. xii + 123 pp., figures, tables, appendices. $12.50 (paper)." American Antiquity 53, no. 2 (April 1988): 439. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/281047.

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Beers, Bridget A. "Arkansas Before the Americans. Hester A. Davis, editor. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Wrightsville, 1991. vi + 152 pp., figures, tables, references, index. $10.00 (paper)." American Antiquity 58, no. 2 (April 1993): 394. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/282005.

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Regnier, Amanda L. "Research, Preservation, Communication: Honoring Thomas J. Green on His Retirement from the Arkansas Archeological Survey. MARY BETH TRUBITT, editor. 2016. Research Series 67. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville. vii + 289 pp. $30.00 (paperback), ISBN 978-1-56349-106-1." American Antiquity 85, no. 2 (November 29, 2019): 398–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2019.97.

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Corruccini, Robert S. "Gone to a better land. Edited by J. C. Rose. Fayettesville, Arkansas: Arkansas Archeological Survey. 1985. xiii + 216 pp., figures, tables, references, appendix. $12.50 (paper)." American Journal of Physical Anthropology 71, no. 2 (October 1986): 251. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajpa.1330710212.

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Girard, Jeffrey S. "The Battle Mound Landscape: Exploring Space, Place, and History of a Red River Caddo Community in Southwest Arkansas. DUNCAN P. MCKINNON. 2017. Research Series 68. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville. viii + 181 pp. $25.00 (paperback), ISBN 978-1-56349-107-8." American Antiquity 84, no. 4 (August 22, 2019): 766–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2019.55.

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Beck, Lane Anderson. "Standards for data collection from human skeletal remains. Edited by Jane E. Buikstra and Douglas H. Ubelaker. 272 pp. Fayetteville: Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series No. 44, 1994. $25.00 (paper)." American Journal of Human Biology 7, no. 5 (1995): 672. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajhb.1310070519.

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Brown, Ian W. "Caddoan Saltmakers of the Ouachita Valley: The Hardman Site. Ann M. Early, editor. Research Series No. 43. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville, 1993. viii + 247 pp., figures, tables, appendixes, references cited, index. $25.00 (paper)." American Antiquity 60, no. 4 (October 1995): 781–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/282070.

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Schilling, Timothy M. "Toltec Mounds: Archeology of the Mound-and-Plaza Complex. Martha Ann Rolingson (with a contribution by Lucretia S. Kelly). 2012. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville. 293 pp. $42.00 (paperback), ISBN-978-156349-104-7." American Antiquity 78, no. 4 (October 2013): 807. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0002731600002900.

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Clark, Caven P. "Archeological and Bioarcheological Resources of the Northern Plains. George C. Frison and Robert C. Mainfort, editors. 1996. Arkansas Archaeological Survey Research Series No. 47. 296 pp., 55 figures, 75 tables, bibliography, index. $20.00 (paper)." American Antiquity 63, no. 4 (October 1998): 713–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2694125.

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Schermer, Shirley J. "Bioairhaeology of the North Central United States. Douglas Owsley and Jerome C. Rose, editors. 1997. Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series No. 49. vi + 400 pp., 102 figures, 205 tables, bibliography, appendices, index. $30.00 (paper)." American Antiquity 63, no. 4 (October 1998): 715. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2694127.

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Lepper, Bradley. "Classification Guide for Arrowheads and Spearpoints of Eastern Pennsylvania and the Central Middle Atlantic. Jay F. Custer. 2001. Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, Harrisburg. 142 pp. $14.95 (paper), ISBN 0-89271-099-3. - Forest Farmsteads: A Millennium Of Human Occupation at Winding Stair in the Ouachita Mountains. Ann M. Early, editor. 2000. Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series 57, Fayetteville. 146 pp. $25.00 (paper), ISBN 1-56349-90-0. - Mortuary Behavior at Upper Nodena. Rita Fishercarroll. 2001. Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series 59, Fayetteville. 112 pp. $12.00 (paper), ISBN 1-56349-93-5. - Historical Perspectives on Midsouth Archeology. Martha Ann Rolingson. 2000. Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Series 58, Fayetteville. 134 pp. $25.00 (paper), ISBN 1-56349-091-9." American Antiquity 69, no. 3 (July 2004): 589–90. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4128411.

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Dunham, Gary H. "Mounds, Embankments, and Ceremonialism in the Midsouth. Robert C. Mainfort and Richard Walling, editors. 1996. Research Series No. 46, Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville. xi + 97 pp., 72 illustrations, 10 tables, references cited, index. $20.00 (paper)." American Antiquity 63, no. 2 (April 1998): 343–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2694708.

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14

Robinson, Christine K. "Human Adaptations and Cultural Change in the Greater Southwest. A. H. Simmons, A. L. Wiener Stodder, D. D. Dykeman, and P. A. Hicks. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville, 1989. x + 322 pp., figures, tables, references, appendixes. $29.00 (paper)." American Antiquity 58, no. 1 (January 1993): 185. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/281483.

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Robinson, Christine K. "Human Adaptations and Cultural Change in the Greater Southwest. A. H. Simmons, A. L. Wiener Stodder, D. D. Dykeman, and P. A. Hicks. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville, 1989. x + 322 pp., figures, tables, references, appendixes. $29.00 (paper)." American Antiquity 58, no. 01 (January 1993): 185. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0002731600056389.

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Lambert, Patricia M. "Bioarcheology of the South Central United States. Jerome C. Rose, editor. 1999. Research Report No. 55, Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville. viii + 297 pp., 39 figures, 160 tables, 6 appendices, references cited, index. $30.00 (paper), ISBN 1-56349086-2." American Antiquity 65, no. 3 (July 2000): 592–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2694551.

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Blitz, John H. "Coles Creek and Mississippi Period Foragers in the Felsenthal Region of the Lower Mississippi Valley. Frank F. Schambach, editor. Research Series No. 39. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville, 1990. vii + 137 pp., figures, tables, references cited, appendix. ’12.00 (paper)." American Antiquity 59, no. 3 (July 1994): 586–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/282497.

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18

Rohrbaugh, Charles L. "Standridge: Caddoan Settlement in a Mountain Environment. Ann M. Early, with Barbara A. Burnett and Daniel Wolfman. Research Series No. 29. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville, 1988. xiv + 195 pp., references, appendices. $10.00 (paper). - Contributions to Spiro Archeology: Mound Excavations and Regional Perspectives. J. Daniel Rogers, Don G. Wyckoff, and Dennis A. Peterson. Studies in Oklahoma's Past No. 16. Oklahoma Archeological Survey, Norman, 1989. xvi + 285 pp., figures, tables, references, appendices. $13.00 (paper)." American Antiquity 55, no. 3 (July 1990): 656. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/281324.

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19

Турова, Наталья Петровна, and Анастасия Дмитриевна Якимовская. "ХРИСТИАНСКАЯ АРХЕОЛОГИЯ ОСМАНСКОГО ПЕРИОДА НА ЮЖНОМ БЕРЕГУ КРЫМА (ПО МАТЕРИАЛАМ НОВЕЙШИХ ИССЛЕДОВАНИЙ)." Археология Евразийских степей, no. 4 (September 29, 2021): 240–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.24852/2587-6112.2021.4.240.257.

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В статье подняты вопросы о христианских древностях на Южном Берегу Крыма в османский период (1475−1783 гг.), представлены результаты новейших археологических и антропологических исследований экспедиции «Институт археологии Крыма РАН» в 2020 г. плитовой могилы XVIII в. в пгт. Массандра, городского округа Ялта Республики Крым. Могила относится к некрополю храмового комплекса поздневизантийского – османского периода. Открытый погребальный комплекс свидетельствует об устойчивых традициях в похоронном обряде христианского населения Крыма, появившегося в средневековое время и просуществовавшего вплоть до переселения христиан из Крыма в Приазовье в 1778 г. ЛИТЕРАТУРААйбабин А.И., Хайрединова Э.А. Плитовые могилы XIV в. на плато Эски-Кермен // Материалы по археологии, истории и этнографии Таврии (МАИЭТ). 2019. Вып. XXIV. С. 250−276.Бертье-Делагард А.Л. Исследование некоторых недоуменных вопросов средневековья в Тавриде // Известия Таврической Ученой Архивной Комиссии (ИТУАК). 1920. №57. С. 1−135.Бочаров С.Г. Средневековый массандровский «Храм 1894 года». Один эпизод научной деятельности К.К. Косцюшко-Валюжинича // Церковная археология южной Руси (сборник материалов Международной конференции «Церковная археология: проблемы, поиски, открытия». Севастополь, 2001. / Отв. ред. В.Л. Мыц. Симферополь: ИА НАН Украины; Национальный заповедник «Херсонес Таврический», 2002. С. 161−166.Бочаров С.Г. Описание средневековых храмов Южного Крыма в «Сборнике Гавриила») // Культовые памятники в мировой культуре V международная конференция по религиоведению. Севастополь: Херсонес Таврический, 2003. С. 11−13.Бочаров С.Г. Заметки по исторической географии генуэзской Газарии XIV-XV вв. Южный Берег Крыма // О древностях Южного берега и гор Таврических / Гл. ред. Мыц В.Л. Киев: ИД «Стилос», 2004. С. 186−200.Бочаров С.Г., Кирилко В.П. Средневековые церкви Южного берега Крыма (материалы к археологической карте) // Сборник чест на 60 години проф. дин Георги Атанасов / Добруджа. Кн. 32. / Гл. ред. Г. Атанасов. Силистра: Регионален исторически музей – Силистра, 2017. С. 279−304.Веймарн Е.В. Отчет об эпизодических археологических разведках, проведенных в Крымской области в 1949 г. / Архив ИА РАН. Ф-1. Р-1. № 306, 307. URL: https://www.archaeolog.ru/ru/archive/elektronnye-polevye-otchety (дата обращения: 22.04.2021)Голофаст Л.А., Мастыкова А.В. О поливной чаше в контексте погребального обряда средневековой храмовой гробницы в Горзувитах // Материалы по археологии, истории и этнографии Таврии (МАИЭТ). 2018. Вып. XXIII. С. 359−395.Гордлевский В.А. Стамбул в XVI веке (Страницы из истории Турции) // Избранные сочинения. Т. IV. Этнография. История востоковедения. Рецензии. М.: Восточная литература, 1968. С. 15−71.Зайцев И.В. О правах христиан в Крымском ханстве. Ярлык хана Сахиб-Гирея крымским христианам (1772 г.) // Крым: проблемы истории / Отв. ред. А.В. Юрасов. М.: Индрик, 2016. С. 63–82.Зубов А.А. Одонтология. Методика антропологических исследований. М.: Наука, 1968. 200 с.Зубов А.А. Методическое пособие по антропологическому анализу одонтологических материалов. М: Этно-онлайн, 2006. 72 с.Кирилко В.П. Надвратная церковь средневекового укрепления Фуна. Датировка и атрибуция // Северное Причерноморье и Поволжье во взаимоотношениях Востока и Запада в XII–XVI вв. / Отв. ред. Г.А. Фёдоров-Давыдов. Ростов-на-Дону: Изд-во: Ростовского ун-та, 1989. С. 62−73.Кирилко В.П. Терминологический аспект в изучении однонефных храмов средневекового Крыма // В поисках сущности. Сборник статей в честь 60-летия Н.Д. Руссеева / Ред. М.Е. Ткачук, Г.Г. Атанасов. Кишинев: Библиотека Stratum, 2019. С. 427−448.Кирилко В.П. Архитектурные миграции средневекового Крыма: однонефные храмы южнобережной части полуострова // Stratum Plus. Археология и культурная антропология. 2020а. №6. С. 129−152.Кирилко В.П. Верхний храм средневекового поселения «Демерджи –I» // Христианство в археологических и письменных источниках: Материалы IX международной научной конференции по церковной археологии / Ред.–сост. В.В. Майко, Э.А. Хайрединова, Т.Ю. Яшаева. Симферополь: Антиква, 2020б. С. 63−65.Лебедев Д.В. Религиозные праздники и обряды греческого населения в Екатеринославской губернии (на примере Мариупольского уезда) в XIX – начале ХХ вв.) // Культура народов Причерноморья. 2011. № 212. С. 168−171.Лысенко А.В., Тесленко И.Б. Античные и средневековые памятники горы Аю-Даг // Алушта и алуштинский регион с древнейших времен до наших дней / Сост. В.Г. Рудницкая, И.Б. Тесленко. Киев: Стилос, 2002. С. 59−88.Лысенко А.В., Тесленко И.Б., Мусин А.Е. Средневековый христианский храм на горе Пахкал-Кая в Южном Крыму// В камне и в бронзе / Сост. А.Е. Мусин, О.Д. Щеглова / Труды ИИМК РАН. Т. XLVIII. Санкт-Петербург: ИИМК РАН, 2017. С. 291−310.Малеев Ю.Н., Сегеда С.П. Методические указания по изучению антропологических материалов при археологических исследованиях для студентов исторического факультета. Киев, 1988. 63 с.Мальгин А.В. Из наследия А.Л.Бертье-Делагарда // Крымский музей 1994. 1995. № 1. С. 151−169.Маркевич А. К вопросу положения христиан в Крыму во время татарского владычества. (Историческая справка). Симферополь. Таврическая губернская типография, 1910. 45 с.Мыц В.Л. Раскопки в горном Крыму// АО 1980 года / Отв. ред. Б.А. Рыбаков. М.: Наука, 1981. С. 288–289.Науменко Е.В. Введение в османскую археологию Крыма. О предмете научной дисциплины и основных направлениях современных исследований // Археология Евразийских степей. 2020. №6. С. 418−472.Новиченкова Н.Г. Христианские памятники на Гурзуфском Седле // V Дмитриевские чтения. История Крыма: факты, документы, коллекции, литературоведение, мемуары. Симферополь:Таврия-Плюс, 2001. С. 3−11.Пальчикова А.П. Первые православные храмы на Южном Берегу Крыма (после присоединения Крыма к России. 20-40-е гг. XIX века) // Христианство на Южном Берегу Крыма. Материалы Крымской научно-практической конференции (24 ноября 2000 г.). Ялта, 2002. С. 13−19.Паршина Е.А. Отчет о работе в урочище Ласпи в 1976 году Южно-Крымской новостроечной экспедиции Института археологии АН УССР. 1976. 23 с.Пеккер Р.Я. Болезни зубов и полости рта. М.: Наука, 1980. 176 с.Репников Н.И. Археологические памятники // ИГАИМК. 1935. Вып. 109. С. 195−200.Серафимов С.А. (протоиерей). Крымские христиане (греки) на северных берегах Азовского моря. Екатеринослав: Типография Братства Св. Владимира, 1901. 46 с.Свадковский Б.С. Учебное пособие по судебно-медицинской стоматологии. М.: Медицина, 1974. 175 с.Сумароков П. Досуги Крымского судьи. СПб., 1803. 276 с.Тесленко И.Б., Лысенко А.В. Средневековый христианский храм на южной окраине с. Малый Маяк и его археологическое окружение // О древностях Южного берега и гор Таврических / Гл. ред. Мыц В.Л. Киев: ИД «Стилос», 2004. С. 260−296.Тесленко И.Б., Лысенко А.В. Погребение священника в одном из средневековых храмов горы Аю-Даг // Материалы Международной церковно-исторической конференции «Духовное наследие Крыма» памяти преподобного Иоанна, епископа Готфийского. (Пос. Партенит. 7−10 июля 2005 г.) / Отв. ред. Л.А. Ясельская. Симферополь: Симферопольская и Крымская епархия, 2007. С. 132−144.Турова Н.П. Средневековые христианские храмы на ЮБК по полевой картотеке Е. И. Висниовской. // VI Дмитриевские чтения. История Южного берега Крыма / Ред. З.Г. Ливицкая. Симферополь: Таврия-Плюс, 2002. С. 9−31.Турова Н.П. Пещерный христианский комплекс Иограф на юге Крыма // Stratum plus. 2013. №6. С. 79−105.Турова Н.П. Средневековый пещерный комплекс хребта Иограф над Ялтой // Материалы по археологии, истории античного и средневекового Крыма / Под ред. М.М. Чорефа. Вып. 6. Севастополь; Тюмень, 2014. С. 93–173.Турова Н.П. История изучения христианских древностей южного берега Крыма // Материалы по археологии, истории античного и средневекового Крыма / Под ред. М.М. Чорефа. Вып. 7. Севастополь; Тюмень, 2015. С. 154−183.Турова Н.П. Археологическое прошлое Поликуровского холма // Город начинался с Поликура. Храм св. Иоанна Златоуста. (Материалы конференции, посвященной 180-летию освящения храма, 14-16 сентября 2007 года). Симферополь: Бизнес-Информ, 2018. С. 80−88.Турова Н.П. Средневековые храмы Главной гряды Крымских гор (материалы к археологической карте муниципальных городских округов Ялты и Алушты). // ΧΕΡΣΩΝΟΣ ΘΕΜΑΤΑ: ИМПЕРИЯ И ПОЛИС // XI Международный Византийский семинар (Севастополь – Балаклава, 3–7 июня 2019 г.). Материалы научной конференции / Отв. ред. Н.А. Алексеенко. Симферополь, 2019а. С. 215−220Турова Н.П. Археологическая карта Горного и Южнобережного Крыма по полевой картотеке Е.И. Висниовской // История и археология Крыма. 2019б. Вып. X. С. 311−354.Удоденко А. «Последняя из многочисленных древних церквей»:судьба Ай-Васильского храма // Старая Ялта: Историко-краеведческий альманах. №4. / Гл. ред. Л.И. Лысова. Ялта: Бабенко Л.И., 2017. С. 16−20.Чумазин Е.В., Иванов Ю.М. Храмы Ялты. Краткий справочник. Ялта, 1998. 96 с.Standards for Data Collection from Human Skeletal Remains: Proceedings of a Seminar at the Field Museum of Natural History /Arkansas Archeological Survey Research Report Series. 44. / Eds. Buikstra, J.E., Ubelaker, D.H. Fayetteville, AR, 1994. 272 p.
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Chowdhury, Pritam. "Middle Caddo Whole Vessels from the Ferguson Site (3HE63)." Index of Texas Archaeology Open Access Grey Literature from the Lone Star State, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.21112/.ita.2018.1.11.

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The Ferguson site (3HE63) is a Caddo ceremonial center in Hempstead County, Arkansas. The Arkansas Archeological Survey and Arkansas Archeological Society excavated Ferguson between 1972 and 1974, under the direction of Dr. Frank Schambach. The site has a middle Caddo Haley phase (A.D. 1200- 1400) component consisting of two mounds, several structures, and a small cemetery area, set atop a 2-acre Woodland period Fourche Maline village. One of the mounds included several elite Caddo shaft graves rich with ceramic artifacts. My recent research with Ferguson site collections included a metric and stylistic analysis of whole vessel ceramics from the Haley phase Caddo components. This paper reports on some results of this inventory and analysis.
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21

McKinnon. "Report: Abstracts from the 71st Caddo Conference held at University of Central Arkansas." Index of Texas Archaeology Open Access Grey Literature from the Lone Star State 2020, no. 1 (2020). http://dx.doi.org/10.21112/ita.2020.1.7.

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The 61st Caddo Conference was held on March 21-23, 2019 in the McCastlain Hall Ballroom on the campus of UCA. The Caddo Conference coincided with Arkansas Archeology Month. Funding was provided by UCA Foundation, the Department of Sociology, Criminology, and Anthropology (SCA) at UCA, the Caddo Conference Organization, the Arkansas Archeological Survey, and the Arkansas Archeological Society. The conference began Friday, March 21st at 9am with several research presentations throughout the day. Twelve presentations and three research posters were presented. Additionally, several book publishers and Caddo artists displayed books and art for sale. There were 45 paid registrants attending the conference. Maximum attendance was during the Saturday afternoon public session, which is estimated around 100 people. A special Saturday afternoon "Caddo Art and Heritage" session featured Caddo culture, art, and dance. In the session, six contemporary Caddo artists discussed their ceramic, beadwork, and stonework art.
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Trubitt, Mary B. "Mapping a Novaculite Quarry in Hot Springs National Park." Index of Texas Archaeology Open Access Grey Literature from the Lone Star State, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.21112/.ita.2005.1.19.

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Novaculite quarries in the Ouachita Mountains of Arkansas and Oklahoma were created through largescale extraction of lithic raw materials, used for stone tools by Caddos and other Native Americans over the past 11,000 years and in recent centuries by Euro-Americans for whetstones. Quarry sites are characterized by surface features like large pits. trenches, battered boulders, and debris piles. This article summarizes the results of an Arkansas Archeological Survey research project that described and mapped surface features at one site (3GA22J to provide a better understanding of the problems and potential of documenting novaculite quarries.
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Trubitt, Mary Beth D., and Chelsea Cinotto. "Current Research at Arkansas Archeological Survey’s Henderson State University Research Station." Index of Texas Archaeology Open Access Grey Literature from the Lone Star State, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.21112/.ita.2018.1.6.

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During 2017, the Arkansas Archeological Survey celebrated its 50th anniversary with a series of website postings (http://archeology.uark.edu/who-we-are/50moments/), a forum at the annual meeting of the Arkansas Archeological Society, and a symposium at the annual Southeastern Archaeological Conference in Tulsa. In addition, the Survey made strides in documenting and archiving its history and collections. The Survey’s Henderson State University (HSU) Research Station in Arkadelphia continued to inventory curated artifact collections and scan older paper records and color slides. Trubitt and Cinotto, assisted by volunteers during weekly Archeology Lab Days, are updating the station’s curated collections database with artifact counts and weights, and using identified diagnostic artifacts to revise temporal information in the AMASDA state site files database. We are also adding new information on novaculite projectile point distributions to the “Arkansas Novaculite” website (http://archeology.uark.edu/novaculite/index.html) database. Ultimately, the novaculite distribution map will be expanded to create maps for each time period. This attention to the station’s curated collections inventory has sparked several new projects. We inventoried over 10,000 artifacts from 1973 testing at the Spanish Diggings site (3GA48) in Garland County, the largest of the Ouachita Mountains novaculite quarries. Novaculite debris from this quarry can now be compared with excavated samples of chipping debris and in-process pieces from other quarries and habitation sites. Diagnostic dart points (Marshall and Gary, var. Gary) indicate use of the quarry at least during the Middle and Late Archaic and Early Woodland periods (ca. 6000-200 B.C.).
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Trubitt, Mary Beth. "A Preliminary Comparison of Two Caddo Mound Sites in Southwest Arkansas." Index of Texas Archaeology Open Access Grey Literature from the Lone Star State, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.21112/ita.2019.1.2.

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Previous Arkansas Archeological Survey excavations at the Hedges site in the Ouachita River valley and the Hughes site in the Saline River valley uncovered evidence of burned structures adjacent to the mounds. An overview of the artifact analyses indicates that the sites were roughly contemporaneous, with intensive use by ancestral Caddo Indians during the Late Caddo period, between the AD 1400s and 1600s. This presentation summarizes the research findings to emphasize comparisons in timing, activities, and community plans.
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Watt, David J. "Two Caddo Mound Sites in Arkansas. MARY BETH TRUBITT. 2021. Research Series 70. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville. x + 205 pp. $25.00 (paperback), ISBN 978-1-56349-112-2." American Antiquity, July 7, 2022, 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2022.60.

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26

Davidson, Matthew J. "Ouachita Mountains Archaeology: Researching the Past with Two Projects in Arkansas. Mary Beth Trubitt. 2019. Popular Series 6. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville. x + 108 pp. $20.00 (paperback), ISBN 978-1-56349-109-2." American Antiquity, September 21, 2023, 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2023.63.

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27

McCrocklin, Claude. "An Intermediate Report on the James Bayou Survey, Marion County, Texas: A Search for Caddo Village." Index of Texas Archaeology Open Access Grey Literature from the Lone Star State, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.21112/.ita.1991.1.9.

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This is a brief report on an archeological survey of James Bayou in East Texas that was organized to find the site of a large Historic Caddo Indian village that was reported to be in the area. Much is known about the village people. They were Kadohadacho Caddo from the Great Bend region of the Red River in Southwest Arkansas who had migrated to the area now known as James Bayou about 1800. The population of the village they established was reported to be near 500 people, and they stayed in the East Texas and Northwest Louisiana area into the early 1840s. However, none of the early contemporary writers who provide this information reported the exact location of the village, and thus the site's location was unknown when the survey was initiated. As of this report, we have surveyed both sides of James Bayou from the Louisiana line to near Stratford Lake. This was our target area since the lower Louisiana part of the Bayou had been surveyed in 1986-1987 under my direction by Shreveport members of the Louisiana Archaeological Society. In all of this vast area the only sites found on both surveys old enough to be components of the Caddo village were in a four mile area along the 200-250 foot contour on the north and east sides of James Bayou. The ten sites found and tested seemed to have a date range of 1790 to, the 1840s, which is the same as the occupation range of the Caddo village. These sites could well be components of the village since no records that we can find report anyone else in that part of Spanish East Texas through the entire period.
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Dowd, Elsbeth L. "Mountain Fork Archaeology: A Preliminary Report on the Ramos Creek Site (34MC1030)." Index of Texas Archaeology Open Access Grey Literature from the Lone Star State, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.21112/.ita.2011.1.22.

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In May-June of 2010, the University of Oklahoma and the Oklahoma Archeological Survey co-sponsored a field school at the Ramos Creek site (34MC1030) in southeastern Oklahoma. Ramos Creek is located in the Ouachita Mountains along the Mountain Fork, a tributary of the Little River. Recently identified by the U.S. Forest Service (USFS), this site is the northernmost known site with a Caddo component along this stream (Figure 1). The best-known Caddo sites identified for this drainage were tested during the Oklahoma River Basin Survey project of the 1960s and today are covered by the man-made Broken Bow Lake. Archaeological investigations along the Mountain Fork have been conducted by Wyckoff, Klinger and Cande, Perttula, and Perttula and Nelson. This past summer’s work at Ramos Creek is part of a broader research program addressing several questions: What was the relationship of Ramos Creek to sites further downstream, including the multimound Woods Mound Group? How were the Caddo sites in this drainage organized politically and what social dynamics shaped their history? Is there a better way of understanding the socio-political organization of these communities than applying models used in other parts of the Caddo area and the wider Southeast? How were these communities related to those living in other parts of the Caddo archaeological area, including the rest of the Ouachita Mountains, the Little River Valley, the Red River Valley, and the Arkansas Valley?
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Perttula, Timothy K., and Tom Middlebrook. "History of the East Texas Caddoan/Caddo Research Group, 1996-2008." Index of Texas Archaeology Open Access Grey Literature from the Lone Star State, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.21112/.ita.2009.1.31.

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Recently, the senior author of this article has been working with Hester Davis (Arkansas Archeological Survey) regarding the editing of her manuscript on the history of the Caddo Conference, which had its 50th meeting in March 2008. In her manuscript she laments the fact that there is very little time being spent by its participants in keeping track of its history: either in the form of transcripts of the meetings, notes on each conference, saving photographs and images, or actively maintaining an archive of materials resulting from each Conference. Davis pointed out that it was important to maintain a record of each Conference, and take steps to do a better job in preserving for others that record for present and future Caddo Conference participants and researchers. Hester’s points, which we agree with, led directly to our discussing the need to put on record a history, as best we can recall it, of the East Texas Caddoan/Caddo Research Group. This informal group has met a number of times since 1996, with the purpose of advancing the general understanding of Caddo archaeology in the East Texas region. The meetings have been held to discuss pertinent and current problems and research issues concerning East Texas Caddo archaeology. As we recall, the East Texas Caddoan [now Caddo] Research Group (ETCRG) developed out of discussions between Perttula and Middlebrook in January 1996. Middlebrook’s own interests in the idea had been piqued by reading the obituary of Fred Plog in the October 1995 American Antiquity that described his founding of the Southwestern Anthropological Research Group, the success that group had in working together on common research problems, and in working together to improve understandings of the prehistory of the American Southwest. This seemed to both of us like an idea worth emulating for the Caddo archaeological area, or at least the East Texas part of the area since we were more familiar with this region’s archaeology and the archaeologists working in that area.
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Perttula, Timothy K., and Bo Nelson. "Certain Caddo Sites in the Ouachita Mountains of Southwestern Arkansas." Index of Texas Archaeology Open Access Grey Literature from the Lone Star State, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.21112/.ita.2004.1.21.

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In the last few years, we have had the opportunity to study a number of prehistoric Caddo Indian sites in the Ouachita Mountains of southwestern Arkansas through conducting archeological surveys of more than 2700 acres at three lakes constructed and managed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Vicksburg District. The three lakes are DeGray Lake on the Caddo River, Lake Ouachita on the Ouachita River, and Lake Greeson on the Little Missouri River. Our purpose in this article is to summarize the archeological character of the prehistoric Caddo sites in these three different parts of the Ouachita Mountains. We focus in particular on the material culture record of these prehistoric Caddo settlements—especially on the ceramic sherds found on them—and discuss when these sites may have been occupied by Caddo peoples.
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Weinstein, Richard A. "The Mazique Site (22Ad502): A Balmoral Phase Coles Creek Mound and Plaza Center in the Natchez Bluffs Region of Mississippi. DANIEL A. LADU. 2018. Research Series 69. Arkansas Archeological Survey, Fayetteville. ix + 233 pp. $25.00 (paperback), ISBN 978-1-56349-108-5." American Antiquity, June 4, 2021, 1–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/aaq.2021.42.

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