Handbook of Alabama Archaeology: Part I, Point Types

audiobook

Handbook of Alabama Archaeology: Part I, Point Types

by James W. (James William) Cambron, David C. (David Carlisle) Hulse

EN·~5 hours·9 chapters

Chapters

9 total

HANDBOOK OF ALABAMA ARCHAEOLOGY - PART I POINT TYPES by JAMES W. CAMBRON DAVID C. HULSE

0:19

PREFACE

6:00

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

2:30

INTRODUCTION

4:30

INDEX

4:54:41

PROVISIONAL POINT TYPES

5:55

ALABAMA COUNTIES

4:52

GLOSSARY

18:15

BIBLIOGRAPHY

16:34

Description

This handbook tackles a long‑standing challenge for Southeast archaeologists: making sense of the thousands of prehistoric flint points that predate the region’s pottery cultures. By introducing a clear, practical system for classifying projectile points, it gives researchers a common language to discuss and compare finds across sites. The authors emphasize cultural provenance over mere visual similarity, allowing the taxonomy to serve as a tool for dating and contextualizing artifacts.

Drawing on decades of field experience, the contributors blend meticulous analysis with vivid illustrations that bring each point type to life. Their careful “splitting” approach avoids over‑generalization, ensuring that only well‑defined specimens receive a name. Whether you’re a seasoned archaeologist, a student, or an enthusiastic amateur collector, the guide offers reliable criteria and helpful examples that make identification straightforward.

Beyond a catalog, the book demonstrates how a robust classification can reveal patterns of human activity over millennia. It’s a valuable reference for anyone seeking to unlock the stories hidden in Alabama’s ancient stone tools.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (339K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Pat McCoy, Larry B. Harrison and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

Release date

2012-06-11

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the authors

JW

James W. (James William) Cambron

1920–1982

A printer by trade and an avocational archaeologist by passion, this mid-century researcher helped document prehistoric point types and excavation sites in Alabama and the wider mid-South. His work remains closely associated with practical field archaeology and artifact classification.

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DC

David C. (David Carlisle) Hulse

1924–1994

Best known for co-authoring a classic guide to Alabama projectile points, this Alabama writer and researcher helped make local archaeology more accessible to collectors and students. He is also credited with work on Alabama birdlife and was remembered in an obituary as an artist and author.

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