Wescott, Daniel J.
A Mass Grave Mexican Soldiers from the Resaca de la Palma Battlefield (41CF3): Demography and Battle Related Injuries
Baker, Lori E.
A Mass Grave Mexican Soldiers from the Resaca de la Palma Battlefield (41CF3): Demography and Battle Related Injuries
Wernecke, D. Clarke
A Mass Grave Mexican Soldiers from the Resaca de la Palma Battlefield (41CF3): Demography and Battle Related Injuries
Collins, Michael B.
A Mass Grave Mexican Soldiers from the Resaca de la Palma Battlefield (41CF3): Demography and Battle Related Injuries ; Excavations at the Oblate Site (41CM1), Comal County, Texas: The 1963 Texas Archeological Society Field School
Fields, Ross C.
The Pine Tree Mound Site and the Archeology of the Nadaco Caddo
Gadus, Eloise Frances
The Pine Tree Mound Site and the Archeology of the Nadaco Caddo
Perttula, Timothy K.
Risky Business: Caddo Farmers Living at the Edge of the Eastern Woodlands
Carpenter, Stephen M.
Siren Site Chronology: A Reconsideration of the Late Archaic to Late Prehistoric Temporal Sequence of Eastern Central Texas
Houk, Brett A.
Siren Site Chronology: A Reconsideration of the Late Archaic to Late Prehistoric Temporal Sequence of Eastern Central Texas
Shafer, Harry J.
The Bateman Biface Cache (41SM443), Smith County, Texas
Walters, Mark
The Bateman Biface Cache (41SM443), Smith County, Texas
Carlson, David L.
The Bateman Biface Cache (41SM443), Smith County, Texas
Wishoff, I. Robert
Excavations at the Oblate Site (41CM1), Comal County, Texas: The 1963 Texas Archeological Society Field School
Nash, Sean R.
Excavations at the Oblate Site (41CM1), Comal County, Texas: The 1963 Texas Archeological Society Field School
Mock, Shirley
41VV2079: A Rock Shelter Excavated by Ted Sayles in 1932
Roberts, Tim
Transitional Archaic/Late Prehistoric Cooking Technology in the Lower Pecos: Excavation of the Lost Midden Site (41VV1991), Seminole Canyon State Park and Historic Site, Val Verde County, Texas
Alvarado, Luis
Transitional Archaic/Late Prehistoric Cooking Technology in the Lower Pecos: Excavation of the Lost Midden Site (41VV1991), Seminole Canyon State Park and Historic Site, Val Verde County, Texas
Founded in 1928 and with a current membership of 1,000, the Texas Archeological Society (TAS) brings together professional and avocational archeologists. TAS promotes scientific archeological exploration and research, the preservation and conservation of archeological materials and sites, and the curation of their associated information.
Publication Title:
Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society
Volume:
83
Collections
This issue is part of the following collection of related materials.
Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society
One of the oldest continuously published archeological journals in the US, the Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society (BTAS) publishes serious research on prehistory, archeological theory, and history.
Texas Archeological Society.Bulletin of the Texas Archeological Society, Volume 83, 2012,
periodical,
2012;
Abilene, Texas.
(https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1013825/:
accessed July 18, 2024),
University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu;
crediting Texas Archeological Society.