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Join us at the Silver River Knap-In Feb 15-16 – Florida Archaeology & Bioarchaeology

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/flarch/blog/join-us-at-the-silver-river-knap-in-feb-15-16/

Join the CTL and other Florida Museum archaeologists at the Knap-In! We’ll be showcasing artifacts and some of the techniques we use to analyze pottery. There will be a variety of activities for children and adults. For more information, visit the event website.
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Bolen Beveled, Subtype 2 – Florida Archaeology & Bioarchaeology

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/flarch/collections/bullen/point-types/bolen-beveled-2/

Bolen Beveled, Subtype 2 Size: Small to large (2.6 – 9.5 cm long) Stemmed/Unstemmed: Stemmed Body Shape: Triangular Cross-Section Shape: Rhomboid Blade Edge Shape: Beveled; serrated Notch Shape: Side notched Stem Shape: Expanded Base Shape: Straight; convex Temporal Period:
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New Searchable Guide to Florida Pottery – Florida Archaeology & Bioarchaeology

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/flarch/blog/new-searchable-guide-to-florida-pottery/

We are pleased to announce the launch of a new way to identify and learn more about the pre-Columbian pottery of Florida. Visit Searchable Pottery Types where you can filter by keyword or a variety of other attributes. We will continue to add information and images to this resource, so check back re
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Bioarchaeological Collections – Florida Archaeology & Bioarchaeology

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/flarch/collections/bioarchaeological/

Bioarchaeological collections currently housed at the Florida Museum of Natural History are primarily from archaeological sites across Florida. These collections were excavated prior to the enactment of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act [NAGPRA]. The Museum is continuing it
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We Excavated a Site: Now What? – Florida Archaeology & Bioarchaeology

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/flarch/blog/we-excavated-a-site-now-what/

Curious about what we do after a field project is over? In this video, Lindsay Bloch discusses how artifacts are processed in the lab. As archaeologists, we curate, or care for, objects so that we and future generations can learn from them. Thanks to Chris LeClere and the UF Anthropology Departme
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History and Overview – Florida Archaeology & Bioarchaeology

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/flarch/collections/worked-faunal-bone-ivory-collection/worked-faunal-bone-and-ivory-history-and-overview/

History and Overview of worked faunal bone and ivory.   These holdings have various histories and we hope new stories to share.  They come from many locations around Florida including rivers and lakes as well as numerous terrestrial sites.  We started the galleries with one of the most unique worked
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Oyster Shells Indicate Season of Mound Construction at the Garden Patch Site – Florida Archaeology & Bioarchaeology

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/flarch/blog/oyster-shells-indicate-season-of-mound-construction-at-the-garden-patch-site/

A new article by researchers at the University of Georgia and the Florida Museum shows how isotope geochemistry can be used to determine when mollusks such as oysters were harvested and used for mound construction. The authors, Isabelle Lulewicz, Neill Wallis, and Victor Thompson, found that the oxy
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New Article on Migration in Eastern Woodlands – Florida Archaeology & Bioarchaeology

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/flarch/blog/migration/

New article by Florida Archaeology curator Neill Wallis and collaborators Thomas Pluckhahn (USF) and Victor Thompson (UGA), tackling the concept of migration in Southeastern archaeology. They used Bayesian modelling on over 100 radiocarbon and thermoluminescence dates from Woodland civic ceremonial
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Swift Creek Pottery Collection – Florida Archaeology & Bioarchaeology

https://www.floridamuseum.ufl.edu/flarch/collections/swift-creek-pottery/

Swift Creek Complicated Stamped pottery, and related types, were widely produced throughout Georgia, eastern Alabama, and northern Florida during the Middle and Late Woodland periods between roughly AD 100 and 800. Complicated stamped pottery preserves truly unique evidence of social interactions.
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