Indians of Arkasnas Homepage


How do we learn about the past?

Indians Before Europeans
American Indian Perspectives
Origins of the Middle World
Creation of the World (Osage)
Creation of the World (Caddo)
Creation of the Sun (Tunica)
The Daughters and the Serpent Monster (Caddo)
How Tlanuwa Deafeated Uktena (Cherokee)
Lightning Defeats the Underground Monster (Caddo)
Chaos into Order
Maintaining Order in Osage Communities
How People Came to Hunt Animals (Caddo)
Origins of Corn (Natchez)
Origins of Fire (Cherokee)
Natchez Sacred Fire
Understanding the World Through Stories
Caddo Creation Stories
Story 1: Creation and Early Migration
Story 2: Creation of Day and Night
Story 3: Origin of Animals
Story 4: Coyote and the Origins of Death
Story 5: Origin of the Medicine Men
Story 6: Lightning and Thunder
Academic Perspectives
Ice Age Migrations
Paleoindians
The Dalton Culture
Archaic Period Cultures
Woodland Period Cultures
The Mississippi Period

First Encounters

Historic Arkansas Indians
The Quapaw Indians
The Caddo Indians
Tunica and Koroa Indians
The Osage Indians
The Chickasaws
The Natchez Indians

Indians After Europeans
Indians and Colonists
Indians in the Old South
Indians in the New South
Indians Today

Current Research
Ancient Foodways
Arkansas Novaculite Project
Bruce Catt
3LO226
Caddo Dance
CARV Project
Research Design
Introduction
Background
Project Goals
Previous Research
Project Organization
Arkansas Archeological Survey
Caddo Nation
Osage Nation
Quapaw Nation
Project Methods
Collection Inventory and Analysis
GIS, Remote Sensing, and Excavation
Summary
References Cited
Project Accomplishments
Project Initiation Meeting
Memorandum
NMAI Inventory
Gilcrease Museum Inventory
LSEM Inventory
UA Collection Inventory
3YE347 Survey
3PP274 Survey
3YE25 Survey
3YE25 Tree Planting
3YE25 Geophysics
3YE25 Excavations
3YE347 Analysis
3YE25 Analysis
3CN213 Analysis
Ozark Reservoir Analysis
Lithic Raw Materials
Year 2 Project Meeting

Writing Prompts

Learning Exercises
Indians and Animals
The Three-Layer Universe
Trade Goods
What is a Map?
Frontier Exchange Economy
Creation Stories
Children of the Middle Waters (Osage)
Origin of the Middle World (Yuchi)
The First People (Caddo)
Origin of the Supreme Being (Caddo)
Origin of Animals (Caddo)
Origin of Corn (Natchez)
Origin of Beans (Tunica)
Origin of Fire (Cherokee)
The Calumet Ceremony in the Mississippi Valley
Marquette Account
Gravier Account
Du Poisson Account
First Encounters: Cultural Perspectives
Gentleman of Elvas: Chapter XXII
Gentleman of Elvas: Chapter XXIII
Gentleman of Elvas: Chapter XXVI
Gentleman of Elvas: Chapter XXIX
Gentleman of Elvas: Chapter XXXII and XXXIII
Ritual Analysis
Caddo Harvest Ritual
Natchez Harvest Ceremony
Smoking Ceremony from the Songs of the Wa-Xo'-Be (Osage)
Transcending Themes

Project Background and History


End of Left Side of Page


GIS, Remote Sensing, and Excavation in the Carden Bottoms

An important tool we will use in this project is non-invasive, near-surface archaeogeophysical prospecting, otherwise known as remote sensing (Clark 1996; Conyers and Goodman 1997; Gaffney and Gator 2003; Kvamme 2001). Archeological sites are the product of cultural and natural formation processes that produce distinctive topographic and physical properties. Archaeogeophysical technologies provide the capability to record the location and strength of those properties before digging begins. Five geophysical technologies will be used to examine our selected Carden Bottoms sites. Magnetometry measures small changes in the earth’s magnetic field and can identify locations where topsoil has been removed and replaced (when, for example, a pit has been dug and then filled in with different material) or where buried sediments have been burned (e.g., hearths, burned houses, etc.). Resistivity and conductivity are measures of the receptivity of underground materials (such as natural sediments versus cultural features) to the flow of electricity. Magnetic susceptibility is a measure of the extent to which underground materials will accept and maintain a magnetic charge. Ground penetrating radar records the speed and shape of radar energy emitted at the surface and reflected back by underground materials, thus producing images of buried features such as square house floors, round refuse pits and elongated burial shafts. Through post-processing of the geophysical data collected in the field, maps of sub-surface anomalies can be produced and geo-referenced to field coordinates that can be accurately located on the ground for follow-up archeological excavation. The Arkansas Archeological Survey owns the complete set of instruments required to conduct this remote sensing work, which it will make available for the duration of this project.

Well beyond the utility of discovering individual archeological features, the approach described here can be used to examine entire archaeological sites in sufficient detail (but with minimal excavation) to reconstruct overall site structure and the spatial organization of activity areas, permitting us to make interpretations concerning social organization, ritual practices, and other cultural phenomena (Lockhart 2007; see also http://www.uark.edu/campus-resources/archinfo/grandview.html).

Collection Inventory and Analysis
Summary

 

 

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Last Updated: January 19, 2011 at 11:11:12 AM Central Time