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Notebook - July-August 1972, South Carolina Institute Of Archaeology And Anthropology--University Of South Carolina Jul 1972

Notebook - July-August 1972, South Carolina Institute Of Archaeology And Anthropology--University Of South Carolina

SCIAA Newsletter - Notebook

Contents:

Editor's Page.....p. 81
Book Review: The Sioux of the Rosebud, A History in Pictures by Henry W. Hamilton and Jean Tyree Hamilton.....p. 82
A Fort Loudoun Gun.....p. 83
Archeological Society of South Carolina.....p. 84
Excavation at Newington Plantation (38DR15).....p. 85
Administrative Changes.....p. 86
Prehistoric Subsistence and Settlement on the Upper Savannah River.....p. 87
A South Carolina State Museum?.....p. 96
Exploratory Excavation in the Yard of the John Fox House (38LX31).....p. 97
A Reprinted Note on South Carolina Burials.....p. 112
A Seventeenth Century Account of Burial Customs Among the Indians of South Carolina.....p. 112


Notebook - January-February 1972, South Carolina Institute Of Archaeology And Anthropology--University Of South Carolina Jan 1972

Notebook - January-February 1972, South Carolina Institute Of Archaeology And Anthropology--University Of South Carolina

SCIAA Newsletter - Notebook

Contents:

Editor's Page.....p. 1
Excavations at Pinckneyville - Site of Pinckney District 1791-1800.....p. 2
Colono-Indian Pottery from Cambridge, South Carolina with Comments on the Historic Catawba Pottery Trade.....p. 3
Society for Historical Archaeology.....p. 31
Exhibit at the Columbia Science Museum.....p. 31
Archaeological Society of South Carolina.....p. 32


Cua Census Report Number 03: Indian Population In Douglas County, Carol Lunbeck Jan 1972

Cua Census Report Number 03: Indian Population In Douglas County, Carol Lunbeck

Publications

In spite of the recent emphasis on minority group problems, there are still significant gaps in the store of knowledge about the American Indian in the urban setting. Omaha is not unique. Much empirical data can be found in the census figures, but it must be extracted and synthesized before it becomes meaningful. Even so, the picture of the urban Indian in Omaha is far from complete. If realistic solutions to the problems confronting urban Indians are to be found, a great deal more empirical research·should precede and accompany the development of programs. Programs which would attack the social inequities …