A Survey of Historic Caddo Sites in Nacogdoches County, Texas
TLDR
A survey of the archaeological resources relating to the historic Caddo period of Nacogdoches County is presented in this paper. But no attempt is made here to provide analysis of the data or to draw synthetic conclusions.Abstract:
This review was originally prepared for presentation to the East Texas Caddo Research Group held in Nacogdoches, Texas on December 2 and 3, 2006. The primary purpose of this article is to summarize the archaeological resources currently known relating to the Historic Caddo period of Nacogdoches County. No attempt is made here to provide analysis of the data or to draw synthetic conclusions. The author's hope is that this survey will be helpful to workers in this area of inquiry by speeding access to available resources and exposing possible research problems.read more
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Journal ArticleDOI
8th Edition of The Archaeology, Bioarchaeology, Ethnography, Ethnohistory, and History of the Caddo Indian Peoples of Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas
TL;DR: Perttula et al. as discussed by the authors published the 8th edition of The 8th Edition of The Archaeology, Bioarchaeology, Ethnography, and Ethnohistory, and History of the Caddo Indians of Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas.
Journal of Northeast Texas Archaeology, Volume 28
TL;DR: In this paper, the seed beads recovered from the Spradley site (41NA206) were compared to other colonial period sites in the region, including Deshazo, Stephens, Pearson, Gilbert, and Womack.
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The Henry Chapman Site (41SM56)
TL;DR: In the mid-1950s, Sam Whiteside conducted excavations at the Henry Chapman site, his site P-5 (41SM56), on Prairie Creek in eastern Smith County, Texas, some 18 miles east of Tyler, Texas.
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Archaeological Investigations at the Henry M. Site (41NA60): An Early Historic Caddo Farmstead in Nacogdoches County, Texas
TL;DR: Middlebrook et al. as discussed by the authors described an early historic Caddo farmstead in Nacogdoches County, Texas, which was used by the Perttula family.
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Archaeogeophysical investigations at an eighteenth-century caddo site in nacogdoches county, east texas
TL;DR: The J T King site (41NA15) is an early-eighteenth-century Caddo habitation site in East Texas as discussed by the authors, which was occupied at the time of the Spanish colonization of East Texas.