Academic literature on the topic '19th century Arkansas'

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Journal articles on the topic "19th century Arkansas"

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Berkstresser, Jr., C. "Development of The Stratigraphic Column in Kansas." Earth Sciences History 13, no. 2 (1994): 154–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/eshi.13.2.t818202v76013716.

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Scientific exploration of what is now Kansas began at the start of the 19th Century. Explorers who touched or crossed present-day Kansas included Lewis and Clark (1804), Pike (1806), Nuttall (1809-1810), Long (1819-1820), Nicollet (1838-1839), and Frémont (1842, 1844, 1845). Their contributions are now of historical interest only. Dr. F. A. Wislizenus crossed the area in 1846 and identified the Carboniferous near present-day Ottawa and the Cretaceous near the great bend of the Arkansas River. F. B. Meek and F. V. Hayden in 1856 identified rocks of Tertiary age, probably in north-central Kansas. Maj. Frederick Hawn collected fossils that were identified by Meek as being of Permian age. In 1858 Hawn and G. C. Swallow published just 13 days before Meek and Hayden presented their paper. In the same year Swallow and Hawn presented the first stratigraphic column for Kansas. This column also introduced the term Quaternary, and included Cretaceous, Permian, and Carboniferous; it incorrectly included Triassic but omitted Tertiary. By 1904 C. S. Prosser and J. W. Beede reclassified the Carboniferous rocks near Cottonwood Falls, and identified these as Pennsylvanian. C. E. Siebenthal introduced the term Mississippian in 1907 for rocks in the southeastern corner of the state. He also assumed that rocks of Cambrian and Ordovician ages were present in the subsurface. In southwestern Kansas, outcrops along the Cimarron River have been variously mapped as Cretaceous, Triassic, Jurassic; they now are considered Triassic.
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Perttula, TImothy K. "The Marcus Kolb Site (41CE438), Cherokee County, Texas." Index of Texas Archaeology Open Access Grey Literature from the Lone Star State, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.21112/.ita.2011.1.35.

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In 2001, Claude McCrocklin conducted metal detecting and test excavations at an historic 19th century site in the upper Neches River basin of East Texas. Based on the findings from that work, unreported until now, McCrocklin believed that this site was occupied by the East Texas Cherokee. This site, the Marcus Kolb site (41CE438), "was confirmed by the artifacts identical with those found on Lost Prairie in Arkansas." The Lost Prairie sites referred to by McCrocklin are the early 19th century Lost Prairie Cherokee sites along the Red River in southwestern Arkansas investigated by McCrocklin. The Marcus Kolb site is within the limits of the proposed 1836 treaty land grant between the Texas Cherokee and the Republic of Texas.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "19th century Arkansas"

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Brantley, Demario Jamar. ""Unraveled Pieces of Me: A Sociological Analysis of Former African American Slave Women's Experiences and Perceptions of Life in Antebellum Arkansas"." University of Akron / OhioLINK, 2012. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=akron1349720506.

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Books on the topic "19th century Arkansas"

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1947-, Worthen William B., ed. Arkansas made: A survey of the decorative, mechanical, and fine arts produced in Arkansas, 1819-1870. University of Arkansas Press, 1990.

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Wooster, Ralph A. Texas and Texans in the Great War. State House Press, 2009.

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Texas and Texans in the Great War. State House Press, 2009.

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Ball, Augustus V. Love and war: The Civil War letters and medicinal book of Augustus V. Ball. State House Press, 2010.

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Bennett, Swannee. Arkansas Made: A Survey of the Decorative, Mechanical and Fine Arts Produced in Arkansas, 1819-1870 (Arkansas Made). University of Arkansas Press, 1991.

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Bennett, Swannee, and William B. Worthen. Arkansas Made: A Survey of the Decorative, Mechanical and Fine Arts Produced in Arkansas, 1819-1870 (Arkansas Made). University of Arkansas Press, 1991.

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Bennett, Swannee, and William B. Worthen. Arkansas Made: A Survey of the Decorative, Mechanical and Fine Arts Produced in Arkansas, 1819-1870, Vol. 1. University of Arkansas Press, 1991.

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Bennett, Swannee, and William B. Worthen. Arkansas Made: A Survey of the Decorative Mechanical and Fine Arts Produced in Arkansas, 1819-1870 Volume 2: Photograhy & Art. University of Arkansas Press, 1991.

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9

C, Seaman Catherine H., ed. Letters from migrating southern families of the 19th century: The letters of the Coleman, Harris, and Hawes families as they migrate from Virginia to Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, and Arkansas, 1810-1900. Sweet Briar College Printing Press, 1987.

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