humans
Prehistoric American Indians in Tennessee
by Jefferson Chapman, McClung Museum, The University of Tennessee, Knoxville The state of Tennessee is long and narrow, stretching 432 […]
Pots and Pathology: Bio-Archaeological Data Suggests A Shift In Prehistoric Settlement Pattern
by Maria Ostendorf Smith, Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Anthropology, Loyola University, Chicago and Research Associate. McClung Museum Pottery making […]
People and Plants in the Prehistoric Southeast: New Information From South Carolina
by Gary D. Crites, McClung Museum Introduction During the past three decades, evidence pertaining to the interrelations between people and […]
Earliest Scalping Victim in America
by Maria O. Smith, Department of Anthropology, Northern Illinois University, and Research Associate, McClung Museum of Natural History & Culture […]
Mouse Creek Phase Communities
by Lynne P. Sullivan, New York State Museum [NOTE: A phase is an archaeological term designating a group of sites […]
Tennessee’s First Crops: Research in Paleoethnobotany
by Gary D. Crites, Research Assistant Professor, Director of Paleoethnobotany* at the McClung Museum of Natural History & Culture * […]