Mississippian Community Organization: The Powers Phase in Southeastern Missouri
Mississippian Community Organization: The Powers Phase in Southeastern Missouri

LIBRAIRIE CARCAJOU

Mississippian Community Organization: The Powers Phase in Southeastern Missouri

De Librairie Carcajou

Current price: 115,52 $
Chargement de l'inventaire...
Acheter en ligne
*Les informations sur le détaillant peuvent varier - pour confirmer la disponibilité du produit, le prix, l'expédition et les informations de retour, veuillez contacter LIBRAIRIE CARCAJOU

The Powers Phase is the name given to a short-lived complex of communities (c. A.D. 1250-1400) founded on low sandy interfluves extending across 300 square kilometers of the Little Black River watershed of southeastern Missouri. There appears to have been a distinct hierarchy of communities ranging in size from Powers Fort, an enclosed area of about 15 acres that contained four mounds and perhaps several hundred houses; to at least 10 large, compact villages ranging in size from 40 to 100 houses; to communities containing 10 to 12 houses; and finally to small one or two house farmsteads. What makes the communities unique is that almost without exception the houses burned (accidentally or intentionally) and collapsed walls and roofs sealed artifacts that were on the structure floors. The Powers Phase Project, which ran from 1967 to 1976, was a high-profile archaeological program throughout its existence and archaeologists eagerly awaited published results, which came out through the late 1970s. The centerpiece of the project was the excavation of two large villages, Turner and Snodgrass, the latter of which received considerable treatment in the literature.

En savoir plus sur LIBRAIRIE CARCAJOU chez Place Rosemère

Informations sur le magasin

Powered by Adeptmind