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Clovis Technology is not Unique to Clovis
PaleoAmerica, 2021We previously showed that stone-tool technological attributes thought to be unique to the Clovis period were present in a radiocarbon and OSL dated middle Holocene-age stratum at Goodson Shelter, O...
Metin I. Eren +2 more
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Is Clovis Technology Unique to Clovis?
PaleoAmerica, 2018Clovis technology is argued to possess distinctive attributes that make a stone tool assemblage recognizable as Clovis, even absent its hallmark fluted projectile points, or radiometric ages that place the assemblage in the late Pleistocene. Excavations at Goodson Shelter in Oklahoma yielded artifacts bearing unmistakable attributes of Clovis biface ...
Metin I. Eren +2 more
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New Perspectives on the Clovis vs. Pre-Clovis Controversy
American Antiquity, 1993We consider the Clovis vs. pre-Clovis debate from three perspectives: migration models; petroglyph and surface-artifact ages; and scientific method. First, we test the hypothesis that a Clovis migration can account for the temporal and spatial distribution of South American Paleoindian sites “accepted” by Clovis-first advocates.
David S. Whitley, Ronald I. Dorn
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The Eckles Clovis Site, 14JW4: A Clovis Site in Northern Kansas
Plains Anthropologist, 2010Clovis archaeological sites in the central Great Plains are rare. A surface assemblage of Clovis lithics from the Eckles Site in north central Kansas can therefore make a significant contribution to understanding Clovis lithic procurement, landscape use and mobility.
Steven R Holen
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Clovis beyond Clovis: Individuality, Filiation, and Miraculous Intervention in the Miracle de Clovis
European Medieval Drama, 2018This article focuses on the Miracle de Clovis, which belongs to the group of texts known as Les Miracles de Nostre Dame par personnages.
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1993
In recent years, archaeologists have come to appreciate that the reason we do what we do is very much influenced by what others before us have done. Understanding the history of a field is therefore crucial to understanding the field itself, for it reveals the theoretical and intellectual context in which ideas have developed and are embedded and how ...
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In recent years, archaeologists have come to appreciate that the reason we do what we do is very much influenced by what others before us have done. Understanding the history of a field is therefore crucial to understanding the field itself, for it reveals the theoretical and intellectual context in which ideas have developed and are embedded and how ...
openaire +1 more source

