Transcription of Lithic Analysis and Sourcing Bibliography
1 1 Selected Bibliography of Lithic Analysis and Sourcing Compiled by Edward Herrmann and Timothy Baumann Glenn A. Black Laboratory of Archaeology, Indiana University July 2010 Amick, Daniel S. 1984 Designing and Testing a Model of Raw Material Variability for the Central Duck River Basin, Tennessee. In prehistoric Chert Exploitation: Studies from the Midcontinent, edited by B. Butler and E. May, pp. 167-84. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Occasional Paper 2. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. 1987 Lithic Raw Material Variability in the Central Duck River Basin: Reflections of Middle and Late Archaic Organizational Strategies. Department of Anthropology, Report of Investigations 46. University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Publications in Anthropology 50.
2 Tennessee Valley Authority, Norris. Andrefsky, William 1998 Lithics: Macroscopic Approaches to Analysis . Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. Aspinall, A., and S. W. Feather 1972 Neutron Activation Analysis of prehistoric Flint Mine Products. Archaeometry 14:41-53. Bakken, K. 1997 Lithic Raw Material Resources in Minnesota: The Minnesota Archaeologist 56:51-83. Bailey, Eric 2002 Sourcing of an Unidentified Chert from Western Wisconsin Paleo-Indian Assemblages. Journal of Undergraduate Research 5:255-260. Basset, John 1980 Chert Resources of the Upper Patoka Drainage Basin. In Archaeological Salvage Excavations at Patoka Lake, Indiana, edited by Cheryl Ann Munson. Research Reports, No. 65. Glenn A. Black Laboratory of Archaeology, Bloomington, Indiana.
3 1981 Chapter 3: Chert Resources. In Archaeological Data Recovery at the Mary Ann Cole Site, edited by Jeff Myers. Report prepared for the Army Corps of Engineers. Basset, John, and Richard L. Powell 1984 Stratigraphic Distribution of Cherts in Limestones of the Blue River Group in Southern Indiana. In prehistoric Chert Exploitation: Studies from the Midcontinent, edited by B. Butler and E. May, pp. 239-252. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Occasional Paper 2. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. Birmingham, , and Van Dyke 1981 Chert and Chert Resources in the Lower Rock River Valley-Illinois. Wisconsin Archaeologist 62:347-360. 2 Boszhardt, 1998 Newly Discovered Lithic Resources in Western Wisconsin. The Minnesota Archaeologist 57:85-96.
4 Butler, Brian. M. and Ernest E. May (editors) 1984 prehistoric Chert Exploitation: Studies from the Midcontinent. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Occasional Paper 2. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale, Cantin, Mark 1989 Diachronic Model of Projectile Point Chert Usage in Southwestern Indiana. In Journal of the Steward Anthropological Society 18(1&2). Research Trends in Midwest Archaeology, edited by Kevin McGowan and Paul Kreisa. University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana. 2000 Comparative Analysis of Thebes and Kirk Lithic Technology and Home Range Implications in Southwestern Indiana. Unpublished Master s thesis, Department of Geography, Geology, and Anthropology, Indiana State University, Terre Haute. 2008 Provenience, Description, and Archaeological Use of Selected Chert Types of Indiana.
5 Anthropology Laboratory, Technical Report 05-01. Indiana State University, Terre Haute. Carson, Cathy and Donald Cochran 1984 A Description of Kenneth Chert. In An Archaeological Survey of the Upper Wabash River Valley. Archaeological Resources Management Service, Reports of Investigations 13. Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana. Claassen, C., and S. Sigmann 1993 Sourcing Busycon Artifacts of the Eastern United States. American Antiquity 58:333-347. Clayton, 1986 The Chemical Environment of Flint Formation in Upper Cretaceous Chalks. In The Scientific Study of Flint and Chert, edited by G. Sieveking and M. B. Hart, pp. 45-54. Cambridge University Press, NY. Converse, Robert N. 1994 Ohio Flint Types. Archaeological Society of Ohio, Columbus.
6 De Bruin, M., P. J. M. Korthoven, C. C. Bakels, and F. C. A. Groen 1972 The Use of Non-destructive Activation Analysis and Pattern Recognition in the Study of Flint Artifacts. Archaeometry 14:55-63. Deller, B. B., and Ellis 1989 Interpretation of Chert Type Variation in Paleoindian Industries, Southwestern Ontario. In Eastern Paleoindian Lithic Resource Use, edited by Ellis and J. C. Lothrop, pp. 191-220. Westview, Boulder, Colorado. 3 DeRegnaucourt, Tony, and Jeff Georgiady 1998 prehistoric Chert Types of the Midwest. Occasional Monographs in Archaeology 7. Upper Miami Valley Archaeological Research Museum, Arcanum, Ohio. Ellis, C. J., J. Tomenchuk, and J. D. Holland 2003 Typology, Use and Sourcing of the Late Pleistocene Lithic Artifacts from the Hiscock Site.
7 In The Hiscock Site: Later Pleistocene and Early Holocene Paleoecology and Archaeology of Western New York State, edited by R. S. Laub, pp. 221-237. Bulletin of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences 37. Ferguson, Jacquelin A. and Robert E. Warren 1992 Chert Resources of Northern Illinois: Discriminant Analysis and an Identification Key. Illinois Archaeology 4(1):1-37. Folk, R. L., and C. E. Weaver 1952 A Study of the Texture and Composition of Chert. American Journal of Science 250:498-510. Gatus, Thomas W. 1979 The Occurrence and Distribution of Chert Bearing Deposits in the Land between the Lakes Area of Western Kentucky. Kentucky Archaeological Society Bulletin 18 & 19:16-28. Goodyear, Albert C. 1979 A Hypothesis for the Use of Cryptocrystalline Raw Materials among Paleoindian Groups of North America.
8 South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, Research Manuscript Series, No. 156. University of South Carolina, Columbia. Guernsey, Elam Y. 1937 Certain Southern Indiana Sources of Lithic Artifact Material. Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science 46:47-42. Hoard, , J. R. Bozell, S. R. Holen, M. D. Glascock, H. Neff, and J. M. Elam 1993 Source Determination of White River Group Silicates from Two Archaeological Sites in the Great Plains. American Antiquity 58:698-710. Holland, J. D. 1994 Lithic Procurement at the Paleo Crossing Site, Medina County, Ohio. Current Research in the Pleistocene 11:61-63. 2003 A Guide to Pennsylvania Lithic Types. Journal of Middle Atlantic Archeology 19:129-150. 2004 Lithic Types of New York.
9 The Bulletin 120:17-36. 2005 Types and Varieties of Archaeologically Relevant Ohio Chert. Ohio Archaeologist 55:20-22. 2005 Chert and Other Lithic Materials of prehistoric New Jersey. Bulletin of the Archaeology Society of New Jersey 60:54-61. 4 2006 Virginia Lithic Types: Chert, Quartzite, and Others. The Quarterly Bulletin 61:137-152. 2007 West Virginia Lithics of Potential Prehistorical Significance. West Virginia Archeologist 53:19-24. 2008 Illinois Chert Types. Illinois Antiquity 43:3-17. Holland, J. D. and Ashton, W. 2008 Indiana Chert Types. Illinois Antiquity 43:18-26. Hovey, H. C. 1880 On the Alabaster Quarries and Flint Works Found in Wyandotte Cave. American Antiquarian 3:27-33. Ives, David J. 1984 The Crescent Hills prehistoric Quarrying Area: More than Just Rocks.
10 In prehistoric Chert Exploitation: Studies from the Midcontinent, edited by B. M. Butler and E. E. May, pp. 187-195. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Occasional Paper No. 2. Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, Carbondale. 1984 Chert Sources and Identification in Archaeology. Can a Silk Purse be Made from a Cow's Ear? In Lithic Resource Procurement: Proceedings from the Second Conference on prehistoric Chert Exploitation, edited by S. Vehik, pp. 211-225. Center for Archaeological Investigations, Occasional Paper 4. Southern Illinois University, Carbondale. Julig, Patrick J. 1994 The Sourcing of Chert Artifacts by INAA: Some Examples from the Great Lakes Region. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Laurentian University, Sudbury, Canada.