In this uneven work, Treese combines a fairly extensive survey of writings on American mound builders with sketches of her own field trips and other tangential materials. After describing a 1987 ...
It was a curious skull that some grave-openers in Ohio stood gazing upon last week. It bore a copper nose, supplied by a mortician who evidently knew that cartilage decays and that one would not want ...
More than 1,000 years after Alabama was home to one of the largest and most important Native American cultures ever to exist, the Birmingham Museum of Art (BMA) is planning an exhibit with some of the ...
For many of the indigenous tribes of North America, ceremonial bunes containing an assortment of sacred objects were, and in some cases continue to be, an important part of their religious lives. As ...
Elizabeth Levy presents a punchy perspective on the past with two new titles in America's Horrible Histories series, Awesome Ancient Ancestors! and Who Are You Calling a Woolly Mammoth?, both illus.
ANTH copy 39088015008204 has bookplate: Smithsonian Institution Libraries, Bequest of the library of William C. Sturtevant. https://siris-libraries.si.edu/ipac20/ipac ...