The Anthropology of Florida
Prehistoric America
A classic volume on the early study of American Indians.
The Archaeology of Ocmulgee Old Fields, Macon, Georgia
The Mound-Builders
Archaeological Survey in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley, 1940–1947
Archeology of the Funeral Mound
Ocmulgee National Monument, Georgia
W. C. McKern and the Midwestern Taxonomic Method
Explores W. C. McKern's use of Linnaean taxonomy as the model for development of a pottery classification system
The Tennessee, Green, and Lower Ohio Rivers Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore
Setting the Agenda for American Archaeology
The National Research Council Archaeological Conferences of 1929, 1932, and 1935
This collection elucidates the key role played by the National Research Council seminars, reports, and pamphlets in setting an agenda that has guided American archaeology in the 20th century.
The Southern and Central Alabama Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore
Covering 19 years of excavations, this volume provides an invaluable collection of Moore's pioneering archaeological investigations along Alabama's waterways.
Method and Theory in American Archaeology
The Cahokia Mounds
Provides a comprehensive collection of Moorehead's investigations of the nation's largest prehistoric mound center
Measuring the Flow of Time
The Works of James A. Ford, 1935-1941
This collection of Ford's works focuses on the development of ceramic chronology—a key tool in Americanist archaeology.
The Northwest Florida Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore
This comprehensive compilation of Moore's archaeological reports on northwest Florida and southern Alabama and Georgia presents the earliest documented investigations of this region.
Antiquities of the Southern Indians, Particularly of the Georgia Tribes
The West and Central Florida Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore
This compilation of Moore's publications on western and central Florida provides all of his archaeological data on the region's mounds and prehistoric canals in a single volume.
The East Florida Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore
This comprehensive compilation of Moore's archaeological publications on eastern Florida will prove an invaluable primary resource for Florida archaeologists.
Clarence B. Moore (1852-1936), a wealthy Philadelphia socialite, paper company heir, and photographer made the archaeology of the Southeast his passion beginning in the 1870s. This volume collects 17 of Moore's publications on East Florida, originally published between 1892 and 1903. These invaluable and copiously illustrated works document the results of Moore's numerous archaeological expeditions along Florida's eastern coastline from the Georgia border to Lake Okeechobee and focus primarily on sites along the St. Johns River and its tributaries. Moore's archaeological work in East Florida was arguably his best and most thorough research from a modern perspective.
The Lower Mississippi Valley Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore
Clarence Bloomfield Moore (1852-1917) is chiefly remembered for the twenty-five years he spent investigating and documenting archaeological sites along every navigable waterway in the southeastern United States. This volume includes works that describe data from Moore's expeditions that were key to the early recognition and preservation of major archaeological sites —Toltec, Parkin, Mound City, and Wicklife, among them—in the Lower Mississippi Valley, all collected together in a one-volume facsimile edition.
The Georgia and South Carolina Coastal Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore
This compilation of Clarence Bloomfield Moore's investigations along the rich coastal and river drainages of Georgia and South Carolina makes
available in a single volume valuable works published a century ago. In some cases his publications are the only documentation extant for sites that have since been destroyed.
The Moundville Expeditions of Clarence Bloomfield Moore
Clarence Bloomfield Moore
The two works reprinted in this volume represent the pinnacle of the career of one of the most remarkable American archaeologists of the early 20th century, Clarence Bloomfield Moore.