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1 Arkansas Archeological Survey Publications 2008/2009

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Page 1: Arkansas Archeological Surveyarcheology.uark.edu/rockart/forms/Catalog Booklet 08-09.pdfwitness not only a well written and highly commendable site report, but also to find one which

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Arkansas Archeological Survey

Publications2008/2009

Page 2: Arkansas Archeological Surveyarcheology.uark.edu/rockart/forms/Catalog Booklet 08-09.pdfwitness not only a well written and highly commendable site report, but also to find one which

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An Antebellum Ozark Community and the Civil War: The Archeology of the Second Mount Comfort Church (3WA880), Washington County, Arkansas (1840–ca. 1865)

by Jerry E. Hilliard

The symmetrical plan of a small brick church built in the early 1840s by Cumberland Presbyterian settlers who formed the community of Mount Comfort, Arkansas, was later altered when Miss Ann James had a small wood-framed room added to the north side as a “music room” for her Mount Comfort Female Seminary.

Archeological excavations over three brief field seasons, 1991–1993, revealed the brick church’s foundation. Over 8000 artifacts, plus archival research, document the building’s use as a church, a school, and a community center, and as a military camp and hospital during the Civil War. At least part of the building was destroyed by faire, with evidence of extensive salvage of brick and other reusable materials.

2008, 65 pp., 33 illus., ISBN 1-56349-102-8 $10.00 (Order RS63)

Two Historic Cemeteries in Crawford County, Arkansasedited by Robert C. Mainfort, Jr. and James M. Davidson

This monograph sets new standards of reporting for historic cemeteries. The authors present detailed descriptions of burials, mortuary hardware, and personal items from two late nineteenth century cemeteries—Becky Wright and Eddy—excavated in 2001 prior to inundation by expansion of Lake Fort Smith in Crawford County, Arkansas. Variability within and between the two cemeteries is explored from a socioeconomic perspective. The cost of each individual burial is calculated, revealing a number of striking contrasts between the two cemeteries.

Results of geophysical surveys and bioarcheological analysis are integrated. This volume should prove of value to historical archeologists and all those concerned with historic cemetery preservation.

2006, 269 pp., 150 illus., ISBN 1-56349-101-X $30.00 (Order RS62)

New Titles in Historic Archeology

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An Inquiry into the Locations and Characteristics of Jacob Bright’s Trading House and William Montgomery’s Tavern by Patrick E. Martin

Pioneering and classic study of Arkansas Post — the earliest European settlement in the Lower Mississippi Valley. Combines historical background from documentary sources with the results of 1971 archeological excavations.

1978, 101 pp., 39 illus., ISBN 1-56349-022-6 $4.00 (Order RS11)

An Archeological Assessment of Historic Davidsonville, Arkansasby Clyde C. Dollar

“The creation of the Arkansas Territory and its march to statehood began with the settlement of the community of Davidsonville” (p. 1). Clyde Dollar’s documentary research established the significance of the site and the survival of archeological evidence, and helped save it from inudation by a proposed artifical lake.

1979, 62 pp., ISBN 1-56349-029-3 $8.00 (Order RR17)

Historic Archeology

The Seat of Justice, 1815–1830: An Archeological Recon-naissance of Davidsonville, 1979by Leslie Stewart-Abernathy

Presents the results of test excavations to determine the extent and significance of intact deposits at this Frontier-era town. “The archeological record of Davidsonville...provides an almost unmatched heritage of a time when the dramatic contrasts of the frontier were intact” (p. 48).

1980, 66 pp., ISBN 1-56349-033-1 $9.00 (Order RR21)

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Popular SeriesRock Art in Arkansasedited by George Sabo III and Deborah Sabo

Images carved or painted on rock walls provide a glimpse into the intellectual life and beliefs of ancient peoples. This first comprehensive treatment of Arkansas’ important body of prehistoric rock art is suitable for professional and general readers.

2005, 146 pp., 70 illus., color ISBN 1-56349-099-4 $10.00 (Order PS05)

Crossroads of the Past: 12,000 Years of Indian Life in Arkansasby Frank Schambach and Leslie Newell

Outlines the prehistory of Arkansas, from the arrival of a few families of adventurous hunters near the end of the Ice Age to that portentous day of June 18, 1541, when Hernando De Soto’s invading army crossed the Mississippi River near Memphis. This is a story of how the first Arkansas residents lived, worked and played: how they gathered, planted and cooked their food; hunted and fished; and built shelters, homes and towns.

1990, 57 pp., 23 illus., annotated bib., ISBN 1-56349-068-4 $3.00 (Order PS02)

Paths of our Children: Historic Indians of Arkansasby George Sabo III

A revised edition of Sabo’s introduction to the cultures and experiences of Arkansas Indian tribes from prehistory to the present. The Quapaws, Caddos, Tunicas, Koroas, and Osages, joined by Cherokees and others in the 18th century, all suffered removal to Indian Territory. Yet these Indians endured, adapted to their new environment, and found ways to keep their values and beliefs alive.

2001, 144 pp., 37 illus., color ISBN 1-56349-092-7 $6.00 (Order PS03)

Ghost Boats on the Mississippi:Discovering Our Working Pastedited by Leslie Stewart-Abernathy

Arkansas was the only state to mount full-scale salvage archeology of wooden boat wreckage exposed by record low water on the Mississippi River in the 1988 drought. Packed with details of steamboat and model barge construction, accounts of late 19th and early 20th century wrecks in the Memphis area, and the changing role of river transport near the end of the steam era. Profusely illustrated. Suitable for archeologists and anyone interested in river history, especially steamboat buffs.

2002, 233 pp., 117 illus., ISBN 1-56349-094-3 –New Lower Price– $20.00 (Order PS04)

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Lab & Field Essentials

Standards for Data Collection from Human Skeletal Remains: Proceedings of a Seminar at The Field Museum of Natural History Organized by Jonathan Haas

Volume Editors: Jane E. Buikstra and Douglas H. Ubelaker Assistant Editor: David Aftandilian

Contributions by: D. Aftandilian, J. E. Buikstra, M. Finnegan, J. Haas, D. A. Kice, C. R. Nichol, D. W. Owsley, J. C. Rose, M. J. Schoeninger, G. R. Scott, C. G. Turner II, D. H. Ubelaker, P. L.

Walker, and E. Weidl

A spiral-bound laboratory manual providing up-to-date guidelines for basic data collection on human skeletal remains. Essential for the bioarcheology classroom or research laboratory.

There is much to recommend this volume. It has the tang of a workshop that worked. It is practical down to the design of record sheets. It can be knocked around in the lab or dropped in a puddle without fear of the cost of a replacement. And it is strictly necessary. Experts are brought together; they give their opinions on areas they know best; a protocol is drawn up for what minimal records to take if time is short, and what more to undertake if the opportunity arises.

— Cyprian Broodbank, Antiquity

A Handbook of Soil Description for Archeologistsby Gregory Vogel

This basic introduction serves as a guide to soil description for archeologists who have little background in soil science or geology, and also as a useful reference for those with more experience. Follows Natural Resource Conservation Service and U.S. Geological Survey guidelines. Lightweight, 9 x 6 inch format tucks into your backpack with ease. Excellent for field schools and handy for all archeological fieldwork.

2002, 32 pp., 7 illus., glossary, $5.00 (Order TP11)

1994, 272 pp., 140 illus., forms, ISBN 1-56349-075-7 $30.00 (Order RS44)

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History of ArcheologyCRM ON CRM: One Person’s Perspective on the Birth and Early Development of Cultural Resource Managementby Charles R. McGimsey III

Charles R. McGimsey offers his views on CRM, and no other single person is more suited to the task. This volume compiles McGimsey’s journals, papers, letters, articles, booklets, and book chapters spanning the 30 years that encompassed a revolution in the way archeology is done in America. A pioneer figure in public archeology and shepherd of the Moss-Bennett bill, McGimsey provides new annotations, abstracts, and section

introductions plus a new essay on the future of CRM. Historians of archeology, those who teach CRM classes, and anyone concerned with archeological and other cultural resources will find CRM on CRM an essential account of this important era.

2004, 222 pp., ISBN 1-56349-097-8 $30.00 (Order RS61)

Historical Perspectives on Midsouth Archeologyedited by Martha Ann Rolingson

The Midsouth region encompasses the Mississippi River alluvial valley from the junction of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers to the mouth of the Red River, and adjacent uplands. Rolingson gathers together seven essays—including two of her own—addressing developments in archeological approaches to this unusual landscape from the 1830s to the 1990s. It is the history of American archeology from a regional perspective.

2001, 134 pp., 13 illus., ISBN 1-56349-091-9 $25.00 (Order RS58)

Ouachita MountainsForest Farmsteads: A Millennium of Human Occupation at Winding Stair in the Ouachita Mountainsedited by Ann M. Early

Excavations in Ouachita National Forest in 1995 explored historic and prehistoric structures at four sites in the Little Missouri River valley. At Blaylock Creek, the Epperson family weathered the Civil War. At Old Phillips Place, a domestic structure was converted to a blacksmith shop. Prehistoric structures at Bug Spot and Winding Stair span late Fourche Maline through mid-15th century Caddoan periods. Ethnobotanical studies and historic forest reconstruction reveal the creative use of narrow mountain valley terrain.

2000, 138 pp., 50 illus., 1-56349-090-0 $25.00 (Order RS57)

Arkansas Archeology in Reviewedited by Neal L. Trubowitz and Marvin D. Jeter

Fifteen chapters, most from papers in a 1980 symposium organized by Hester Davis and presented at both the Caddo Conference and the SAA. The volume provides an overview of the state of Arkansas archeology as the Arkansas Archeological Survey —founded thirteen years earlier—came of age.

1982, 369 pp., 89 illus., ISBN 1-56349-039-0 $10.00 (Order RS15)

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The Lower Mississippi AreaColes Creek and Mississippi Period Foragers in the Felsen-thal Region of the Lower Mississippi Valley edited by Frank Schambach

The undisturbed, stratified Bangs Slough site, with occupations dating from A.D. 800 to 1700, produced no evidence of horticulture, despite the use of sophisticated collection techniques.

It is an increasingly rare phenomenon in today’s world of archeological publishing to witness not only a well written and highly commendable site report, but also to find one which makes a significant and in many ways groundbreaking contribution to the regional archeological literature.

— Tristam R. Kidder, Mississippi Archaeology1990, 137 pp., 78 illus., ISBN 1-56349-069-2 $12.00 (Order RS39)

The Shallow Lake Site and Its Place in Regional Prehistory in Southeast Arkansasby Martha Ann Rolingson and Frank Schambach

Test excavations in Mound C recovered floral and faunal specimens, and bone, antler, shell, lithic, and ceramic artifacts. Schambach’s ceramic typology for the Trans-Mississippi South is featured.

1981, 231 pp., 48 illus., ISBN 1-56349-036-6 $10.00 (Order RS12)

Powell Canal: Baytown Period Occupation on Bayou Macon in Southeast Arkansasby John H. House

Well-preserved food remains, artifacts, and human burials represent a Baytown occupation dating to around A.D. 500. The faunal assemblage indicated a strong aquatic orientation, but there was no sign of maize agriculture.

1982, 109 pp., 57 illus., ISBN 1-56349-043-9 $4.00 (Order RS19)

Plum Bayou CultureToltec Mounds and Plum Bayou Culture: Mound D Excavations by Martha A. Rolingson, with contributions by Gayle J. Fritz, Rob Hoffman, Te-resa L. Hoffman, and Gina Powell

Toltec Mounds, the largest known Plum Bayou site, was in use over 300 years as the center of a simple chiefdom. The small resident population was able to mobilize people living in the surrounding countryside to build large earthworks. Mound D, fourth largest at the site, was built between A.D. 950 and 1030 in two stages, each with a structure on top. Quantities of food refuse and grog-tempered vessels suggest communal feasting. A few high-status artifacts reflect long-distance trade.

1998, 153 pp., 107 illus., ISBN 1-56349-085-4 $25.00 (Order RS54)

Emerging Patterns of Plum Bayou Cultureedited by Martha A. Rolingson

These papers present data and impressions from 1977–1979 fieldwork at Toltec Mounds. The Survey’s major long-term research program was gaining steam and the site was under development as an archeological state park. Contains essays by Rolingson that defined Plum Bayou as a distinctive cultural expression in the Arkansas River lowland.

1982, 99 pp., 48 illus., ISBN 1-56349-042-0 $8.00 (Order RS18)

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Caddo Area Studies

Caddoan Saltmakers in the Ouachita Valley: the Hardman Siteby Ann M. Early

A Caddoan community occupied the Hardman site for 300 years just before the period of sustained contact with Europeans. They extracted salt from Saline Bayou using an evaporation process and practiced a mixed agricultural and gathering economy. Skeletal remains show evidence of a previously unknown disease possibly related to saltmaking.

1993, 256 pp., 84 illus., ISBN 1-56349-074-9 $25.00 (Order RS43)

Standridge: Caddoan Settlement in a Mountain Environmentby Ann M. Early

This small artificial mound contained at least five structures, an elaborate burial, and sheet midden with occupational debris; dating to the 14th and early 15th centuries.

1988, 195 pp., 81 illus., ISBN 1-56349-056-0 $10.00 (Order RS29)

Two Caddoan Farmsteads in the Red River Valleyedited by David E. Kelley

Two small house sites were occupied year-round over a 40–60 year period between A.D. 1650 and 1710, possibly by the Nakasas, who were visited by Bienville in 1700. The sites were buried by the Great Raft of the Red River.

1997, 160 pp., 79 illus., ISBN 1-56349-082-X $15.00 (Order RS51)

Cedar Grove: a Late Caddo Farmstead in the Red River Valleyedited by Neal L. Trubowitz

Cedar Grove, a Belcher/Chakanina phase site, contained remains of a circular house and two ramada structures, confirming portions of the Teran-Soule ethnographic model of Caddoan settlement.

1984, 281 pp., 227 illus., ISBN 1-56349-047-1 $13.50 (Order RS23)

Pre-Caddoan Cultures in the Trans-Mississippi South: a Beginning Sequenceby Frank F. Schambach

After years of circulating in photocopies, this 1970 Harvard dissertation is now available intact in a new format and with an update by the author. This volume remains the definitive work on Archaic and Fourche Maline cultures in the Trans-Mississippi South, and demonstrates the enduring value of WPA-excavated collections. Schambach’s distinctive and lively style make this seminal research a delight to read.

1998, 142 pp., 95 illus., ISBN 1-56349-084-6 $20.00 (Order RS53)

Caddo Bibliography: Archeology and Bio-archeology, Ethnohistory and Ethnogra-phy, and HistoryCompiled & edited by Timothy K. Perttula, Ann M. Early, Lois E. Albert, & Jeffrey Girard

The title says it all. Newly updated. Essential for the Caddo area specialist.

2006 (1999), 91 pp. Revised Edition $7.00 (Order TP10)

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Ozark StudiesSpradley Hollow Habitations: Four Rock Shelters and a Historic Homestead

by Kathleen H. Cande

Explores how Ozark rockshelters have been used from Early Archaic to modern times: as domestic encampments, storage areas, and other specialized uses, including a still. Chapters on faunal remains and paleoethnobotany at prehistoric and historic sites. 2000, 136 pp., 50 illus., ISBN 1-56349-089-7 $25.00 (Order RS56)

Contributions to Ozark Prehistoryedited by George Sabo III

Brings together the results of several projects marking a renaissance in Ozark area archeology. Organized in three parts devoted to rockshelter and open habitation sites, mound sites in northwest Arkansas, and paleoethnobotanical studies.

1986, 123 pp., 77 illus., ISBN 1-56349-054-4, $5.00 (Order RS27)

Ozark Reservoir Papers: Archeology in West-Central Arkansas 1965–1970

by Michael P. Hoffman, Nancy E. Meyer, Dan Printup, and Clell L. Bond

A major contribution to the culture history of the Arkansas River Valley in the Ozark Mountain area, and a precursor of modern cultural resource management. The fieldwork reflects Arkansas’ model of strong professional-amateur cooperation.

45 pp., 55 illus., ISBN 1-56349-020-X $4.00 (Order RS10)

The Albertson Site: A Deeply and Clearly Stratified Ozark Bluff Shelter

by Don R. Dickson

Over 10,000 years represented by meticulous excavations and lithic analysis, giving a baseline for stratigraphic studies of the area.

1991, 307 pp., 212 illus., ISBN 1-56349-071-4 $25.00 (Order RS41)

The Archeology of Rock Art at The Narrows Rock Shelter, Crawford County, Arkansasby Jerry E. Hilliard, with contributions by Gayle J. Fritz and Eben S. Cooper

The Narrows contained undisturbed midden rich in botanical and faunal remains, stone tools, and ceramics. 1995 excavations produced the first ever in situ association of artifacts connected to rock art production in Arkansas. Fritz performed ethnobotanical analysis. Cooper experimented with photogrammetry to record the petroglyphs.

2004, 55 pp., 35 illus., ISBN 1-56349-098-6 $6.00 (Order RR31)

Data Recovery at the Skaggs Site, Madison County, Arkansasedited by Robert C. Mainfort, Jr.

Phase 3 mitigation at this Ozark site yielded Paleoindian through Middle Woodland, with the most intensive use during Late Archiac. Includes use-wear, archeomagnetic, protein residue, paleoethnobotanical, and geomorphological anlayses.

2000, 121 pp., 61 illus., ISBN 1-56349-087-0 $10.00 (Order RR28)

An Archaic Campsite in the Ozarks: Test Excavations at the Ryan Site

by Randall L. Guendling

Highway mitigation yielded Early and Late Archaic short-term occupations represented by lithics and a basin-shaped feature.

2000, 52 pp., 19 illus., ISBN 1-56349-088-9 $5.00 (Order RR29)

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Northeast ArkansasMississippian Transitions at John’s Lake: Data Recovery Excavations at Three Buried Sites in Northeast Arkansasby C. Andrew Buchner, Eric S. Albertson, Neal H. Lopinot, Larissa A. Thomas, Emanuel Breitburg, and Jerome V. Ward

Three late prehistoric Mississippi County sites, buried by sand in the 1811–1812 New Madrid earthquake and excavated as a mitigation project, produced abundant data on the development of social complexity from Early to Middle Mississippian.

2003, 190 pp., 129 illus., ISBN 1-56349-096-X $25.00 (Order RS60)

Parkin: The 1978–1979 Archeologi-cal Investigations of a Cross County, Arkansas Siteby Phyllis A. Morse

Establishes the importance of the Parkin site and Parkin phase in De Soto research. Parkin became an Archeological State Park in 1990.

1981, 110 pp., 29 illus., ISBN 1-56349-037-4

$6.00 (Order RS13)

Ceramic Variability within the Parkin Phase: A Whole Vessel Metric Analy-sis from Northeast Arkansas by Teresa Lynn Brown

This study explores intersite and intrasite ceramic variation using metric data collected from whole vessels excavated at four Late Mississippian period Parkin phase sites: Vernon Paul, Hazel, Neeley’s Ferry, and Barton Ranch.

2005, 84 pp., 56 illus., ISBN 1-56349-100-1, $6.00 (Order RR32)

The Brand Site: A Techno-Functional Study of a Dalton Site in Northeast Arkansasby Albert C. Goodyear

This 1974 study is reprinted with a new introduction by Dan F. Morse and reflections of the author on the Brand site after 25 years.

1995 [1974], 224 pp., 79 illus., ISBN 1-56349-008-0 $20.00 (Order RS07)

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Mortuary StudiesGone To A Better Land: a Biohistory of a Ru-ral Black Cemetery in the Post-Reformation Southedited by Jerome C. Rose

A classic in the treatment of historic cemeteries. The Cedar Grove Baptist Church cemetery was relocated prior to revetment construction. Archeological and bioanthropological studies provide eloquent testimony of the hardships visited upon southwest Arkansas Blacks in the period following emancipation.

The findings ... complement, and ... go beyond what historians have ascertained about black life ... from written records. — Willard Gatewood

There is no question that [the authors’] techniques and methods will become the benchmark by which other studies are measured.

— George J. Armelagos

1985, 153 pp., 97 illus., ISBN 1-56349-050-1 $12.50 (Order RS25)

Mortuary Behavior at Upper Nodenaby Rita Fisher-Carroll

Some social differentiation was seen in mound vs. non-mound burial at the Nodena phase type site, but no strong evidence for a multitiered political hierarchy.

2002, 112 pp., 20 illus., ISBN 1-56349-093-5 $12.00 (Order RS59)

A Mortuary Analysis of Vernon Paul Siteby Thomas Nelson Gannon

Minimal evidence of social ranking was found in the burial population at this Parkin phase site in Cross County, Arkansas.

2002, 64 pp., 12 illus., ISBN 1-56349-095-1 $10.00 (Order RR30)

The Ables Creek Site: a Protohistoric Cemetery in Southeast Arkansas by H. Edwin Jackson

Ceramic and skeletal data reveal the impact of the Soto entrada in changing mortuary patterns and funerary objects, possibly representing “the first wave of epidemic-produced depopulation.”

1992, 128 pp., 83 illus., ISBN 1-56349-072-2 $12.00 (Order RS42)

Using field notes and burial cards from 1930s excavations, two recent reports explore the evidence for complex chiefdoms in northeast Arkansas —

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Classic CatalogPrehistoric Plies: A Structural and Comparative Analysis of Cordage, Netting, Basketry, and Fabric from Ozark Bluff Sheltersby Sandra Clements Scholtz

A classic study of rare plant fiber artifacts from the dry rockshelters of northwest Arkansas. Scholtz provides a detailed classificatory description of “interworked structures” excavated in the 1930s and curated by the University of Arkansas Museum. This significant and timeless archeological report has proved a favorite with museum and textile specialists, as well as fiber artists, basketmakers and weavers. Our digital reprint provides high quality graphic reproduction and updated fonts at an affordable price.

1975, 193 pp., 153 illus., ISBN 1-56349-013-7 $10.00 (Order RS09)

Surveyors of the Ancient Mississippi Valleyby P. Clay Sherrod and Martha Ann Rolingson

Surveys at 26 sites in the LMV and five sites in the Caddoan area show that ceremonial mound arrangements were planned in part on the basis of celestial orientation and standardized units of measure. A landmark study addressing prehistoric engineering and cosmology in the eastern United States.

The reconstruction of the intellectual life of an extinct society is so important and yet so difficult that any considered and well-reasoned attempt of the task deserves the warmest applause. Surveyors clearly falls into this meritorious category.

— Malcolm Webb, American Antiquity

1987, 155 pp., 34 illus., ISBN 1-56349-055-2 $10.00 (Order RS28)

Nodena: an Account of 90 Years of Archeological Investigation in Southeast Mississippi County, Arkansas edited by Dan F. Morse

This new (2007) digital reprint of the revised 1989 edition includes all of the original graphics in high-resolution formats that provide much-improved visual quality, and updated fonts for a pleasing appearance and easy readability. Minor errors to the text have been corrected, but otherwise, this is the same classic study of all extant skeletal material, with Morse’s 1989 summary of the Nodena phase. We are pleased to offer this reprint at the same great price.

2007 digital reprint of 1989 revised edition, 137 pp., 78 illus.,

ISBN 1-56349-057-9 $10.00 (Order RS30)

MoundsMounds, Embankments, and Ceremonialism in the Midsouthedited by Robert C. Mainfort and Richard Walling

Aboriginal earthworks of eastern North America have fascinated scholars and the general public for hundreds of years. This volume brings together studies of Poverty Point, Brogan, Crenshaw, Obion, Wickliffe, Chucalissa, and other Midsouth region mound sites, with emphasis on interpreting how these structures functioned within prehistoric social and ideological systems.

1996, 98 pp., 72 illus., ISBN 1-56349-077-3 $15.00 (Order RS46)

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Overviews

North Central U.S. — CNPO set $150

South Central U.S. — SWDO set $100 (includes RS37 as pdf)

... Prairie-Timberlands (Missouri)

by Raymond Wood, Michael J. O’Brien, Katherine A. Murray, and Jerome C. Rose

1995, 218 pp., ISBN 1-56349-076-5 $20.00 (RS45)

... Northern Plains (Wyoming, Montana, North & South Dakota) edited by George C. Frison and Robert C. Mainfort

1996, 206 pp., ISBN 1-56349-078-1 $20.00 (RS47)

... Central Great Plains (Colorado, Kansas, Nebraska) edited by Jack L. Hofman

1996, 296 pp., ISBN 1-56349-079-X $30.00 (RS48)

... Ozark & Ouachita Mountains (Arkan-sas, Oklahoma, Missouri) by George Sabo III, Ann M. Early, Jerome C. Rose, Barbara A. Burnett, Louis Vogele, Jr., and James P. Harcourt

1988, 296 pp., ISBN 1-56349-059-5 $29.00 (RS31)

... Greater Southwest (Colorado, New Mexico, Texas) by Alan Simmons, Ann Lucy Wiener Stodder, Douglas D. Dykeman, and Patricia A. Hicks

1989, 322 pp., ISBN 1-56349-060-9 $29.00 (RS32)

... Central, South and Lower Pecos (Texas) by Thomas Hester, Stephen L. Black, D. Gentry Steele, Ben W. Olive, Anne A. Fox, Karl J. Rein-hard, and Leland C. Bement

1989, 178 pp., ISBN 1-56349-061-7 $19.00 (RS33)

... Lower Mississippi Valley & Trans-Mississippi South (Arkansas, Louisiana)

by Marvin D. Jeter, Jerome C. Rose, G. Ishmael Williams, Jr., and Anna M. Harmon

1989, 468 pp., ISBN 1-56349-065-X (RS37)

This out-of-print volume is available as a pdf with the SWDO ser

Archeological and bioanthropological summaries in a framework of “adaptation types” – sets at special prices

These volumes, written and edited by top regional scholars, provide important baseline reference works for scholars and cultural resource managers in the north central and south central U.S. Also useful as college texts for regional archeology classes. The Literature volumes (RS36 & RS50) supply a thorough bibliographic database up to the dates of publication. Summaries of sites, cultural sequences, and bioanthropology are organized in a framework of adaptation types for an overall approach emphasizing human interactions with varied and changing landscapes over the past 12,000 years.

TX

KS

AROK

LA

KS

MO

IANE

SD

MTND

MN

WYCO

WI

NM

Bioarcheology of the North Central United States edited by Douglas W. Owsley and Jerome C. Rose

1997, 400 pp., ISBN 1-56349-080-3 $30.00 (RS49)

... Northern Woodlands (Minnesota, Wisconsin, Iowa) by Elizabeth D. Benchley, Blane Nansel, Clark A. Dobbs, Susan M. Thurston Myster, Barbara H. O’Connel

1997, 370 pp., ISBN 1-56349-083-8 $40.00 (RS52)

Archeological Literature of the North Central United States• 12,000 entries of substantive archeological reports• Maps (both color and b&w) using GIS layers show cultural resources and environmental trend

1996, ISBN 1-56349-081-1 CD-ROM $30.00 (RS50)

... Southern Great Plains (Colorado, Kan-sas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Texas) by Jack L. Hofman, Robert L. Brooks, Douglas W. Owsley, Richard L. Jantz, Murray K. Marks, and Mary H. Manhein

1989, 286 pp., ISBN 1-56349-063-3 $29.00 (RS35)

... Gulf Coastal Plain (Texas) by Dee Ann Story, Janice A. Guy, Barbara A. Bur-nett, Martha Doty Freeman, Jerome C. Rose, D. Gentry Steele, Ben W. Olive, and Karl J. Reinhard

1990, 748 pp., ISBN 1-56349-066-8 $59.00 (RS38)

Bioarcheology of the South Central United States edited by Jerome C. Rose

1999, 296 pp., ISBN 1-56349-086-2 $30.00 (RS55)

Archeological Literature of the South Central United States• over 7000 entries indexed from an automated cita-tions database; 4 volumes

1989, 1049 pp., ISBN 1-56349-064-1 $25.00 (RS36)

Page 14: Arkansas Archeological Surveyarcheology.uark.edu/rockart/forms/Catalog Booklet 08-09.pdfwitness not only a well written and highly commendable site report, but also to find one which

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RS01 Archeological and Historical Resources of the Red River Basin. Edited by Hester A. Davis, with sections by Robert Neuman (Louisiana), E. Mott Davis (Texas), Don G. Wyckoff (Okla-homa), and Michael P. Hoffman (Arkansas). 1970. 194 pages. 1-56349-002-1. Reprint 2002. $12.00

RS02 Three Sites in Millwood Reservoir: The Hutt Site, the Stark Site, and the Beard Site. Michael P. Hoffman. 1970. 94 pages. 1-56349-003-X. Out of Print

RS03 Site Destruction Due to Agricultural Practices. Janet L. Ford and Martha A. Rolingson (southeast Arkansas); Larry D. Medford (northeast Arkansas). 1972. 82 pages. 1-56349-004-8. Reprint 2002. Out of Print

RS04 see RS30RS05 Excavations at the Mineral Springs Site, Howard County, Ar-

kansas. Charles F. Bohannon. 1973. 74 pages. 1-56349-006-4. Out of Print – New reprint coming soon

RS06 Quaternary Geology of the Lower Mississippi Valley. Roger T. Saucier. 1974. 2nd Printing, 1984. 28 pages with color map. 1-56349-007-2. $6.00

RS07 The Brand Site: A Techno-Functional Study of a Dalton Site in Northeast Arkansas. Albert C. Goodyear. 1974. 118 pages. 1-56349-008-0. Reprint 1995. $20.00

RS08 The Cache River Archeological Project: An Experiment in Con-tract Archeology. Assembled by Michael B. Schiffer and John H. House. 1975. 339 pages. 1-56349-012-9. Reprint 2004. Our of Print

RS09 Prehistoric Plies: A Structural and Comparative Analysis of Cordage, Netting, Basketry, and Fabric from Ozark Bluff Shelters. Sandra Clements Scholtz. 1975. 193 pages. 1-56349-013-7. Digital Reprint 2006. $10.00

RS10 Ozark Reservoir Papers: Archeology in West-Central Arkansas 1965-1970. Michael P. Hoffman, Nancy E. Myer, Dan Print-up, and Clell L. Bond. 1977. 145 pages. 1-56349-020-X. $4.00

RS11 An Inquiry into the Locations and Characteristics of Jacob Bright’s Trading House and William Montgomery’s Tavern. Patrick E. Martin. 1978. 101 pages. 1-56349-022-6. $8.00

RS12 The Shallow Lake Site (3UN9/52) and Its Place in Regional Prehistory. Martha Ann Rolingson and Frank F. Schambach. 1981. 231 pages. 1-56349-036-6. $10.00

RS13 Parkin: The 1978-1979 Archeological Investigations of a Cross County, Arkansas, Site. Phyllis A. Morse. 1981. 110 pages. 1-56349-037-4. Reprint 1985. $6.00

RS14 Settlement Predictions in Sparta. Robert H. Lafferty III, Jeffrey L. Otinger, Sandra Clements Scholtz, W. Fredrick Limp, Bev-erly Watkins, and Robert D. Jones. 1981. 299 pages. 1-56349-038-2. $6.50

RS15 Arkansas Archeology in Review. Edited by Neal L. Trubowitz and Marvin D. Jeter. 1982. 369 pages. 1-56349-039-0. $10.00

RS16 Fancy Hill: Archeological Studies in the Southern Ouachita Mountains. Edited by Ann M. Early and W. Fredrick Limp. 1982. 336 pages. 1-56349-040-4. $25.00

RS17 Human Adaptation in the Grand Marais Lowland: Intensive Archeological Survey and Testing in the Felsenthal Naviga-tion Pool, Ouachita and Saline Rivers, Southern Arkansas. E. Thomas Hemmings. 1982. 362 pages. 1-56349-041-2. $25.00

RS18 Emerging Patterns of Plum Bayou Culture: Preliminary Investi-gations of the Toltec Mounds Research Project: Toltec Papers II. Edited by Martha A. Rolingson. 1982. 99 pages. 1-56349-042-0. $8.00

RS19 Powell Canal: Baytown Period Occupation on Bayou Macon in Southeast Arkansas. John H. House. 1982. 109 pages. 1-56349-043-9. $4.00

RS20 The Mangrum Site: Mitigation through Excavation and Preser-vation in Northeast Arkansas. Timothy C. Klinger. 1982. 264 pages. 1-56349-044-7. $8.00

RS21 A State Plan for the Conservation of Archeological Resources in Arkansas. Edited by Hester A. Davis. 1982. 574 pages. 1-56349-045-5. CD-ROM. $15.00 On request.

RS22 Contributions to the Archeology of the Great Bend Region of the Red River Valley, Southwest Arkansas. Edited by Frank F. Schambach and Frank Rackerby. 1982. 140 pages. 1-56349-046-3. Reprint 2004. Out of Print

RS23 Cedar Grove: An Interdisciplinary Investigation of a Late Caddo Farmstead in the Red River Valley. Edited by Neal L. Trubow-itz. 1984. 281 pages. 1-56349-047-1. $13.50

RS24 The Alexander Site, Conway County, Arkansas. Edited by E. Thomas Hemmings and John H. House. 1985. 138 pages. 1-56349-049-8. $4.00

RS25 Gone to a Better Land: A Biohistory of a Rural Black Cemetery in the Post-Reconstruction South. Edited by Jerome C. Rose. 1985. 216 pages. 1-56349-050-1. $12.50

RS26 The Moser Farmstead, Independent But Not Isolated: The Archeology of a Late Nineteenth Century Ozark Farmstead. Leslie C. Stewart-Abernathy. 1986. 183 pages. 1-56349-051-X. $6.00 Limited Quantities

RS27 Contributions to Ozark Prehistory. Edited by George Sabo III. 1986. 123 pages. 1-56349-054-4. $5.00

RS28 Surveyors of the Ancient Mississippi Valley. P. Clay Sherrod and Martha Ann Rolingson. 1987. 155 pages. 1-56349-055-2. $10.00

RS29 Standridge: Caddoan Settlement in a Mountain Environment. Ann M. Early. 1988. 195 pages. 1-56349-056-0. $10.00

RS30 Nodena: An Account of 90 Years of Archeological Investigation in Southeast Mississippi County, Arkansas. Edited by Dan F. Morse. 1989. 150 pages. 1-56349-057-9. Digital reprint 2008. $10.00

RS31 Human Adaptation in the Ozark and Ouachita Mountains. George Sabo III, Ann M. Early, Jerome C. Rose, Barbara A. Burnett, Louis Vogele, Jr., and James P. Harcourt. 1988. 296 pages. 1-56349-059-5. $29.00

RS32 Human Adaptations and Cultural Change in the Greater South-west. Alan Simmons, Ann Lucy Wiener Stodder, Douglas D. Dykeman, and Patricia A. Hicks. 1989. 322 pages. 1-56349-060-9. $29.00

RS33 From the Gulf to the Rio Grande: Human Adaptation in Cen-tral, South, and Lower Pecos, Texas. Thomas Hester, Stephen L. Black, D. Gentry Steele, Ben W. Olive, Anne A. Fox, Karl J. Reinhard, and Leland C. Bement. 1989. 178 pages. 1-56349-061-7. $19.00

RS34 The Use of Multispectral Digital Imagery in Archeological Investigations. Edited by W. Fredrick Limp. 1989. 121 pages. 1-56349-062-5. $16.00

RS35 From Clovis to Comanchero: Archeological Overview of the Southern Great Plains. Jack L. Hofman, Robert L. Brooks, Douglas W. Owsley, Richard L. Jantz, Murray K. Marks, and Mary H. Manhein. 1989. 286 pages. 1-56349-063-3. $29.00

RS36 The Archeological Literature of the South-Central United States. Edited by W. Fredrick Limp, Ellen Zahn, and James P. Har-court. 1989. I, Author Index; II-IV, Subject Index. 1049 pages. 4 volumes (sold as set only). 1-56349-064-1. $25.00

RS37 Archeology and Bioarcheology of the Lower Mississippi Val-ley and Trans-Mississippi South in Arkansas and Louisiana. Marvin D. Jeter, Jerome C. Rose, G. Ishmael Williams, Jr., and Anna M. Harmon. 1989. 468 pages. 1-56349-065-X. Out of Print (Available as pdf with SWDO set)

RS38 The Archeology and Bioarcheology of the Gulf Coastal Plain. Dee Ann Story, Janice A. Guy, Barbara A. Burnett, Martha Doty Freeman, Jerome C. Rose, D. Gentry Steele, Ben W. Olive, and Karl J. Reinhard. 1990. 2 volumes, 748 pages. 1-56349-066-8. $59.00

RS39 Coles Creek and Mississippi Period Foragers in the Felsenthal Region of the Lower Mississippi Valley. Edited by Frank F. Schambach. 1990. 137 pages. 1-56349-069-2. $12.00

RS40 Arkansas Before the Americans. Edited by Hester A. Davis. 1991. 153 pages. 1-56349-070-6. Out of Print

RS41 The Albertson Site, a Deeply and Clearly Stratified Bluff Shelter. Don R. Dickson. 1991. 307 pages. 1-56349-071-4. $25.00

RS42 The Ables Creek Site: A Protohistoric Cemetery in Southeast Arkansas. H. Edwin Jackson. 1992. 128 pages. 1-56349-072-2. $12.00

RS43 Saltmakers in the Ouachita Valley: The Hardman Site. Edited by Ann M. Early. 1993. 256 pages. 1-56349-074-9. $25.00

RS44 Standards for Data Collection from Human Skeletal Remains. Edited by Jane E. Buikstra and Douglas H. Ubelaker. 1994. 206 pages plus 29 forms. 1-56349-075-7. $30.00

RS45 Holocene Human Adaptations in the Missouri Prairie Timber-lands. W. Raymond Wood, Michael J. O’Brien, Katherine A. Murray, and Jerome C. Rose. 1995. 218 pages. 1-56349-076-5. $20.00

RS46 Mounds, Embankments, and Ceremonialism in the Midsouth. Edited by Robert C. Mainfort and Richard Walling. 1996. 98 pages. 1-56349-077-3. $15.00

RS47 Archeological and Bioarcheological Resources of the Northern Plains. Edited by George C. Frison and Robert C. Mainfort. 1996. 206 pages. 1-56349-078-1. $20.00

RS48 Archeology and Paleoecology of the Central Great Plains. Edited by Jack L. Hofman. 292 pages. 1-56349-079-X. $30.00

RS49 Bioarcheology of the North Central United States. Edited by Douglas W. Owsley and Jerome C. Rose. 1996. 300 pages. 1-56349-080-3. $30.00

RS50 Archeological Literature of the North Central United States. 1996. 1-56349-081-1. CD-ROM. $30.00

RS51 Two Caddoan Farmsteads in the Red River Valley: The Archeol-ogy of the McLelland and Joe Clark Sites. Edited by David B. Kelley. 1997. 160 pages. 1-56349-082-X. $15.00

RS52 Archeology and Bioarcheology of the Northern Woodlands. Elizabeth D. Benchley, Blane Nansel, Clark A. Dobbs, Susan M. Thurston Myster, and Barbara H. O’Connell. 1997. 370 pages. 1-56349-083-8. $40.00

RS53 Pre-Caddoan Cultures in the Trans-Mississippi South. Frank F. Schambach. 1998. 142 pages. 1-56349-084-6. $20.00

RS54 Toltec Mounds and Plum Bayou Culture: Mound D Excava-tions. Martha Ann Rolingson. 1998. 153 pages. 1-56349-085-4. $25.00

RS55 Bioarcheology of the South Central United States. Edited by Jerome C. Rose. 1999. 296 pages. 1-56349-086-2. $30.00

RS56 Spradley Hollow Habitations: Four Rock Shelters and a Historic Homestead. Kathleen H. Cande. 2000. 136 pages. 1-56349-089-7. $25.00

Research Series

Page 15: Arkansas Archeological Surveyarcheology.uark.edu/rockart/forms/Catalog Booklet 08-09.pdfwitness not only a well written and highly commendable site report, but also to find one which

15

RS61 CRM on CRM. Charles R. McGimsey III. 2004. 222 pages. 1-56349-097-8. $30.00

RS62 Two Historic Cemeteries in Crawford County, Arkansas. Edited by Robert C. Mainfort, Jr. and James M. David-son. 2006. 269 pages. 1-56349-101-X. $30.00

RS63 An Antebellum Ozark Community and the Civil War: The Archeology of the Second Mount Comfort Church (3WA880), Washington County, Arkansas (1840–ca. 1865). Jerry E. Hilliard. 2008. 65 pages. 1-56349-102-8. $10.00

RR01 A Survey and Assessment of the Archeological Resources of Cad-ron Settlement, Arkansas. Samuel D. Smith. 1974. 72 pages. 1-56349-009-9. Out of Print

RR02 Archeological and Historical Inventory and Field Reconnais-sance of Village Creek, Jackson and Lawrence Counties, Arkan-sas. Jacqueline R. Fehon and Alfred D. Viscito. 1974. 73 pages. 1-56349-010-2. Out of Print

RR03 Emergency Survey and Testing in the Lower White River and Arkansas Post Canal Area, Arkansas, 1965. Hester A. Davis and Charles M. Baker. 1974. 85 pages. 1-56349-011-0. Out of Print

RR04 Report of Excavations at the Zebree Site, 1969. Dan F. Morse. 1975. 246 pages. 1-56349-014-5. Out of Print

RR05 Watershed Summary of Archeological and Historical Resources in the White River Basin, Arkansas and Missouri. Carol S. Spears, Nancy E. Myer, and Hester A. Davis. 1975. 332 pages. 1-56349-015-3. Out of Print

RR06 Arkansas Eastman Project. Charles M. Baker. 1975. 135 pages. 1-56349-016-1. Out of Print

RR07 Pine Mountain: A Study of Prehistoric Human Ecology in the Arkansas Ozarks. Compiled by L. Mark Raab. 1976. 202 pages. 1-56349-017-X. Reprint. $20.00

RR08 A Preliminary Report of the Zebree Project: New Approaches in Contract Archeology in Arkansas. Dan F. Morse and Phyllis A. Morse. 1976. 111 pages. 1-56349-018-8. Out of Print

RR09 Dierks Lake: A Problem Study in Cultural Resource Manage-ment. Thomas J. Padgett. 1976. 118 pages. 1-56349-019-6. Out of Print

RR10 Poinsett Watershed: Contract Archeology on Crowley’s Ridge. Thomas J. Padgett. 1977. 144 pages. 1-56349-021-8. Out of Print

RR11 Archeological Investigations in the Proposed Van Buren Water Supply Project Area, West Central Arkansas. J. Jeffrey Flen-niken and Robert A. Taylor. 1977. 103 pages. 1-56349-022-6. $4.00

RR12 Contract Archeology in the Lower Mississippi Valley of Arkan-sas: Miscellaneous Papers. Assembled by Timothy C. Klinger. 1977. 180 pages. 1-56349-023-4. Out of Print

RR13 Blue Mountain Lake: An Archeological Survey and Experimen-tal Study of Inundation Impacts. Thomas J. Padgett. 1978. 115 pages. 1-56349-024-2. Out of Print

RR14 St. Francis II: An Archeological Assessment of Three COE-Sponsored Channelization Projects in the St. Francis Basin, Arkansas. Assembled by Timothy C. Klinger and Mark A. Mathis. 1978. 176 pages. 1-56349-025-0. Out of Print

RR15 Norfork Lake: A Cultural Resources Management Study with Implications for Prehistoric Settlement-Subsistence Patterns in the Ozarks. Thomas J. Padgett. 1979. 72 pages. 1-56349-027-7. $1.50

RR16 Bull Shoals Lake: An Archeological Survey of a Portion of the Bull Shoals Lake Shoreline. Lee Novick and Charles Cantley. 1979. 94 pages. 1-56349-028-5. $2.00

RR17 An Archeological Assessment of Historic Davidsonville, Arkan-sas. Clyde D. Dollar. 1979. 62 pages. 1-56349-029-3. $8.00

RR18 Archeological Assessment of the Buffalo National River. Daniel Wolfman. 1979. 62 pages. 1-56349-030-7. $1.50

RR19 Hampton: An Archeological and Historical Overview of a Pro-posed Strip Mine Tract in South Central Arkansas. Assembled by Timothy C. Klinger. 1979. 101 pages. 1-56349-031-5. $4.00

RR20 The Conway Water Supply: Results of Archeological Survey and Testing and Historical Survey of a Proposed Reservoir Area in Conway County, Arkansas. Lawrence Gene Santeford and Wil-liam A. Martin. 1980. 219 pages. 1-56349-032-3. Out of Print

RR21 The Seat of Justice, 1815-1830: An Archeological Reconnais-sance of Davidsonville, 1979. Leslie C. Stewart-Abernathy. 1980. 66 pages. 1-56349-033-1. $9.00

RR22 Nimrod Lake: An Archeological Survey of a Reservoir Draw-down. Thomas L. Leatherman. 1980. 185 pages. 1-56349-034-X. Out of Print

RR23 Pine Mountain Revisited: An Archeological Study in the Arkan-sas Ozarks. Neal L. Trubowitz. 1980. 219 pages. 1-56349-035-8. Reprint. Out of Print

RR24 Excavations at Four Sites in the Cypress Creek Basin, Arkansas. Lawrence Gene Santeford, William A. Martin, and E. Thomas Hemmings. 1985. 294 pages. 1-56349-048-X. $4.00

RR25 Model Validation in Sparta. Edited by Robert H. Lafferty III and John H. House. 1986. 300 pages. 1-56349-052-8. $6.00

RR26 Village Creek: An Explicitly Regional Approach to the Study of Cultural Resources. Timothy C. Klinger. 1986. 397 pages. 1-56349-053-6. $6.00

RR27 The Burris Site and Beyond: Archeological Survey and Testing along a Pipeline Corridor and Excavations at a Mississippian Village, Northeast Arkansas. Edited by Marvin D. Jeter. 1989. 222 pages. 1-56349-058-7. $10.00

RR28 Data Recovery at the Skaggs Site, Madison County, Arkansas. Edited by Robert C. Mainfort, Jr. 2000. 121 pages. 1-56349-087-0. $10.00

RR29 An Archaic Campsite in the Ozarks: Test Excavations at the Ryan Site (3MA233). Randall L. Guendling. 2000. 52 pages. 1-56349-088-9. $6.00

RR30 A Mortuary Analysis of Vernon Paul Site. Thomas Nelson Gan-non. 2002. 101 pages. 1-56349-095-1. $10.00

RR31 The Archeology of Rock Art at The Narrows Rock Shelter, Crawford County, Arkansas. Jerry E. Hilliard. 55 pages. 1-56349-098-6. $6.00

RR32 Ceramic Variability within the Parkin Phase: A Whole Vessel Metric Analysis from Northeast Arkansas. Teresa Lynn Brown. 2005. 84 pages. 1-56349-100-1. $6.00

RESEARCH REPORTS has been discontinued. No. 32 was the final volume in this series.

Research Reports

PS02 Crossroads of the Past: 12,000 Years of Indian Life in Arkan-sas. Frank F. Schambach and Leslie Newell.1990. 57 pages. 1-56349-068-4. $3.00

PS03 Paths of Our Children: Historic Indians of Arkansas. Second Edition. George Sabo III. 2001. 144 pages. Color. 1-56349-092-7. $6.00

PS04 Ghost Boats on the Mississippi. Edited by Leslie C. Stewart-Abernathy. 2002. 237 pages. 1-56349-094-3. NEW LOWER PRICE $20.00.

PS05 Rock Art in Arkansas. Edited by George Sabo III and Deborah Sabo. 2005. 146 pages. Color. 1-56349-099-4 $10.00

Popular Series

RS57 Forest Farmsteads: A Millennium of Human Occupation at Winding Stair in the Ouachita Mountains. Edited by Ann M. Early. 2000. 138 pages. 1-56349-090-0. $25.00

RS58 Historical Perspectives on Midsouth Archeology. Edited by Mar-tha Ann Rolingson. 2001. 134 pages. 1-56349-091-9. $25.00

RS59 Mortuary Behavior at Upper Nodena. Rita Fisher-Carroll. 2001. 112 pages. 1-56349-093-5. $12.00

RS60 Mississippian Transition at John’s Lake. C. Andrew Buchner, Eric S. Albertson, Neal H. Lopinot, Larissa A. Thomas, Eman-uel Breitburg, and Jerome V. Ward. 2003. 194 pages. 1-56349-096-X. $25.00

Technical Papers

TP10 Caddoan Bibliography. Revised Edition. Timothy K. Perttula et al. 2006. 91 pages. $7.00

TP11 A Handbook of Soil Description for Archeologists. Gregory Vogel. 2002. 32 pages. $5.00

Page 16: Arkansas Archeological Surveyarcheology.uark.edu/rockart/forms/Catalog Booklet 08-09.pdfwitness not only a well written and highly commendable site report, but also to find one which

16

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