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8 result(s) for "Brennan, Tamira K"
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TREE-RING-RADIOCARBON DATING PARAFFIN-CONSERVED CHARCOAL AT THE MISSISSIPPIAN CENTER OF KINCAID, ILLINOIS, USA
Archival charcoal tree-ring segments from the Mississippian center of Kincaid Mounds provide chronometric information for the history of this important site. However, charcoal recovered from Kincaid was originally treated with a paraffin consolidant, a once common practice in American archaeology. This paper presents data on the efficacy of a solvent pretreatment protocol and new wiggle-matched 14C dates from the largest mound (Mound 10) at Kincaid. FTIR and 14C analysis on known-age charcoal intentionally contaminated with paraffin, as well as archaeological material, show that a chloroform pretreatment is effective at removing paraffin contamination. Wiggle-matched cutting dates from the final construction episodes on Mound 10 at Kincaid, indicate that the mound was used in the late 1300s with the construction of a unique structure on the apex occurring around 1390. This study demonstrates the potential for museum collections of archaeological charcoal to contribute high-resolution chronological information despite past conservation practices that complicate 14C dating.
Reconsidering Mississippian Communities and Households
Explores the archaeology of Mississippian communities and households using new data and advances in method and theory   Published in 1995, Mississippian Communities and Households , edited by J.Daniel Rogers and Bruce D.
Interrogating Diaspora and Movement in the Greater Cahokian World
Archaeological and isotopic evidence from Greater Cahokia and several prominent outlier sites argues against simple diaspora models either for the rise or fall of this pre-Columbian urban phenomenon. Besides indications that a culturally diverse population was associated with the city throughout its history, we argue that a spiritual vitality undergirded its origins such that many movements of people would have been two-way affairs. Some Cahokians who ultimately left the city may have been members of foreign lineages in the beginning.
Architectural variability in the Southeast
Some of the most visible expressions of human culture are illustrated architecturally. Unfortunately for archaeologists, the architecture being studied is not always visible and must be inferred from soil inconsistencies or charred remains. This study deals with research into roughly a millennium of Native American architecture in the Southeast and includes research on the variation of construction techniques employed both above and below ground. Most of the architecture discussed is that of domestic houses with some emphasis on large public buildings and sweat lodges. The authors use an array of methods and techniques in examining native architecture including experimental archaeology, ethnohistory, ethnography, multi-variant analysis, structural engineering, and wood science technology. A major portion of the work, and probably the most important in terms of overall significance, is that it addresses the debate of early Mississippian houses and what they looked like above ground and the changes that occurred both before and after the arrival of Europeans. Contributors:Dennis B. BlantonTamira K. Brennan Ramie A. GougeonTom H. GreshamVernon J. Knight Jr. Cameron H. Lacquement Robert H. Lafferty, IIIMark A. McConaughyNelson A. Reed Robert J. ScottLynne P. Sullivan
Architectural Variability in the Southeast
Some of the most visible expressions of human culture are illustrated architecturally. Unfortunately for archaeologists, the architecture being studied is not always visible and must be inferred from soil inconsistencies or charred remains. This study deals with research into roughly a millennium of Native American architecture in the Southeast and includes research on the variation of construction techniques employed both above and below ground. Most of the architecture discussed is that of domestic houses with some emphasis on large public buildings and sweat lodges. The authors use an array of methods and techniques in examining native architecture including experimental archaeology, ethnohistory, ethnography, multi-variant analysis, structural engineering, and wood science technology. A major portion of the work, and probably the most important in terms of overall significance, is that it addresses the debate of early Mississippian houses and what they looked like above ground and the changes that occurred both before and after the arrival of Europeans.   Contributors : Dennis B. Blanton Tamira K. Brennan  Ramie A. Gougeon Tom H. Gresham Vernon J. Knight Jr.  Cameron H. Lacquement  Robert H. Lafferty, III Mark A. McConaughy Nelson A. Reed  Robert J. Scott Lynne P. Sullivan
Practicing Archaeology: An Introduction to Cultural Resources Archaeology
The bulk of these extraacademics (an astounding 85.5 percent of all archaeologists employed in their field, according to the authors) practice archaeology within the broadly defined field of cultural resource management: finding employment with the government, private sector firms, and inhouse archaeology branches of larger companies. Practicing Archaeology is an essential manual for archaeologists who aspire to make a living in cultural resource management and an invaluable resource for those who aim to teach it.