Academic literature on the topic 'Pottery Illinois'

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Journal articles on the topic "Pottery Illinois"

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Stoltman, James B., Danielle M. Benden, and Robert F. Boszhardt. "New Evidence in the Upper Mississippi Valley for Premississippian Cultural Interaction with the American Bottom." American Antiquity 73, no. 2 (2008): 317–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0002731600042293.

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The recovery of anomalous (red-slipped, shell/grog/sandstone-tempered) pottery from three sites in the Upper Mississippi Valley (UMV) prompted a petrographic analysis of thin sections of 21 vessels from these sites. The goal was to evaluate their possible derivation from the American Bottom, the nearest locality where such pottery commonly occurs. Among the 12 UMV vessels tempered with shell (nine red slipped), ten were determined, based on comparisons to thin sections of stylistically similar pottery from the American Bottom, to have essentially identical physical compositions. Additionally,
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Redmond, Brian G. "Yankeetown, Duffy, or Duffytown?: An Examination of Ceramic Variability in the Lower Ohio Valley." North American Archaeologist 9, no. 4 (1989): 299–317. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/kvu2-28eb-2tfg-9b9v.

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A recent stylistic analysis of ceramic material from the Yankeetown site (12-W-1) of southwestern Indiana has revealed a greater diversity of decorative elements than that indicated by previous descriptions of Yankeetown Phase pottery. The analysis revealed a particularly high frequency of bar stamped rim sherds that were similar to Duffy Complex ceramics from southeastern Illinois. The results of the analysis were compared with Winters's (1967) typological description of “Duffy Decorated” ceramics and revealed a number of close affinities between Yankeetown and Duffy material culture. Further
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Shennan, S. J., and J. R. Wilkinson. "Ceramic Style Change and Neutral Evolution: A Case Study from Neolithic Europe." American Antiquity 66, no. 4 (2001): 577–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2694174.

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Following on the work of Dunnell, the evolutionary archaeology school has made a sharp distinction between functional and stylistic variation in archaeological artifacts. Variation is defined as functional if it is affected by selection processes and as stylistic if it is a result of processes of random drift. The argument has been further developed by Neiman (1995), who showed by simulation that processes of cultural mutation and drift could produce the kinds of "battleship curves" that generally characterize artifact-style frequency distributions through time, and also demonstrated that they
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Mabry, T. R., H. A. Hobbs, T. A. Steinlage, et al. "Distribution of Leaf-Feeding Beetles and Bean pod mottle virus (BPMV) in Illinois and Transmission of BPMV in Soybean." Plant Disease 87, no. 10 (2003): 1221–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis.2003.87.10.1221.

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Bean leaf beetles (BLB; Cerotoma trifurcata) were collected in soybean (Glycine max) fields in 58 and 99 Illinois counties surveyed during the 2000 and 2001 growing seasons, respectively. In 2000, BLB counts were highest in the central portion of the state. BLB counts were lower the following year, but were more uniformly distributed throughout the state. BLB tested positive for Bean pod mottle virus (BPMV) in 37 of 41 counties assayed in 2000. In 2001, BLB tested positive for BPMV in 86 of 99 counties sampled. In 2000 and 2001, western corn rootworm (WCR; Diabrotica virgifera virgifera) adult
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Warnock, Daniel F. "Mechanical Shearing Device for Potted Rosemary Christmas Tree Topiaries." HortTechnology 14, no. 1 (2004): 95–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.21273/horttech.14.1.0095.

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Greenhouse production of rosemary (Rosemarinus officinalis) as small potted Christmas-tree topiaries for holiday sales have become necessary for many companies marketing to large retail outlets. Topiaries must be sheared multiple times to obtain an acceptable Christmas-tree shape. Most production greenhouses use hand pruning shears or hand-held cordless grass shears to shape topiaries free hand or with the aid of a template. Crop size and uniformity can vary with these shearing methods. To create a more uniform rosemary Christmastree topiary for cultivar evaluations, a mechanical shearing devi
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Collins, Bruce. "The Lincoln–Douglas Contest of 1858 and Illinois' Electorate." Journal of American Studies 20, no. 3 (1986): 391–420. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0021875800012743.

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Who won the Lincoln–Douglas election of 1858? is a question that has frequently been pondered by historians. This is not surprising, since the campaign of 1858 in Illinois was, in David Potter's words, “perhaps the most famous local political contest in American history.” It made Abraham Lincoln'snationalreputation, though Lincoln had enjoyed strong support in his run for the Senate in 1855, and had been a respectable midwestern candidate for the Republicans' vice-presidential nomination in 1856. It also confirmed Senator Stephen A. Douglas's differences with the national Democratic Party unde
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Rogers, Frederick S., and Charles W. Pitrat. "Distribution of Tylothyris (Brachiopoda) and its occurrence in the Traverse Group (Middle Devonian) of Michigan." Journal of Paleontology 61, no. 3 (1987): 494–507. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022336000028651.

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The septate, lamellose, spiriferacean brachiopod genus Tylothyris North, 1920, is considered to be a delthyridid of the subfamily Tylothyridinae Carter, 1972. Herein, the diagnosis of the Tylothyridinae is emended to include forms with micro-ornament, and with a myophragm or median septum on the floor of the pedicle valve.For the first time, Tylothyris is formally reported from the Traverse Group rocks of Michigan, Givetian through early Frasnian in age. Two species of the genus occur in the Traverse Group. The first, T. subvaricosa (Hall and Whitfield, 1872), previously described by Stainbroo
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Keller, Sarah. "Queer Timing: The Emergence of Lesbian Sexuality in Early Cinema. By Susan Potter. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2019." Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 46, no. 3 (2021): 771–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/712074.

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Ekelund, Robert B., and Robert F. Hébert. "Retrospectives." Journal of Economic Perspectives 16, no. 3 (2002): 197–215. http://dx.doi.org/10.1257/089533002760278785.

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This feature addresses the history of economic words and ideas. The hope is to deepen the workaday dialogue of economists, while perhaps also casting new light on ongoing questions. If you have suggestions for future topics or authors, please write to Joseph Persky, c/o Journal of Economic Perspectives, Department of Economics (M/C 144), University of Illinois at Chicago, 601 South Morgan Street, Room 2103, Chicago, Illinois 60607-7121. Until recently, the standard story line in history of thought textbooks was that a triumvirate of British and Continental writers established demarcation betwe
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Soares, J. M., F. F. do Crato, D. M. Macedo, and R. W. Barreto. "Sclerotium rolfsii Causing Stem Rot of Impatiens walleriana in Brazil." Plant Disease 93, no. 11 (2009): 1214. http://dx.doi.org/10.1094/pdis-93-11-1214c.

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Impatiens walleriana, busy lizzy or balsam (local names in Brazil maria-sem-vergonha or beijo-de-frade), is an African member of the Balsaminaceae that has long ago been introduced and established in Brazil. It is now widely cultivated commercially as a potted plant and a popular garden plant (3). It also is a common weed along the coast and is particularly troublesome in some banana plantation areas. There are only two records of fungal pathogens attacking this plant in Brazil: Cercospora fukushiana (leaf spot) and Oidiopsis haplophylli (powdery mildew). In January 2009, a population of disea
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Pottery Illinois"

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Muntz, Alice Eileen. "Interpreting Ritual in Ceramics of Late Mississippian Southern Illinois." OpenSIUC, 2018. https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses/2277.

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This research aims to understand whether and how ritual manifests in ceramic objects dating to the Late Mississippian Period (ca. late 1200s A.D. to A.D. 1500) in southern Illinois. The study focuses on ritual phenomena that occurred at two village sites: Millstone Bluff (11Pp3) and Dillow’s Ridge (11U635). Millstone Bluff has been interpreted as a site of public ritual and unusual symbolic importance evidenced by its general location and topography, spatial organization, and distinctive rock art. Though Dillow’s Ridge was the locale for an inordinate level of lithic tool production, in other
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Books on the topic "Pottery Illinois"

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Gums, Bonnie L. The Kirkpatricks' potteries in Illinois: A family tradition. Illinois Transportation Archaeological Research Program, 1997.

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Mansberger, Floyd R. Early industrialized pottery production in Illinois: Archaeological investigations at White and Company's Gooselake Stoneware Manufactury and Tile Works, rural Grundy County, Illinois. Illinois State Museum Society, 1997.

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Bairnsfather, Ragnhild Munson. Six generations of Potters in North Carolina, Indiana, Illinois, and Kentucky: The ancestry of James Thompson Potter of Lexington, Kentucky. R.M. Bairnsfather, 1988.

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Walthall, John A. The traditional potter in nineteenth-century Illinois: Archaeological investigations at two kiln sites in upper Alton. Illinois State Museum, 1991.

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5

Barbara, Rose, Roberts Lisa C, McDonnell Mark, and Garfield Park Conservatory (Chicago, Ill.), eds. Chihuly: Gardens & glass. Portland Press, 2002.

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Henry, Geldzahler, ed. Chihuly: Persians : Dia Art Foundation, Bridgehampton, NY, July 10-August 21, 1988. Dia Art Foundation, 1988.

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Chihuly, Dale. Chihuly: The George R. Stroemple collection. Portland Art Museum, 1997.

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Chihuly, Dale. Chihuly: Form from fire. Museum of Arts and Sciences, 1993.

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Chihuly, Dale. Chihuly: Color, glass, and form. Kodansha international, 1986.

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Late Woodland and Mississippian Occupations in the Hadley and McCraney Creek Valleys of West-Central Illinois (Transportation Archaeological Research Reports, No. 14). Illinois Transporatation Archaeological Resea, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "Pottery Illinois"

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Friberg, Christina M. "Archaeological Investigations at the Audrey-North Site (11GE20)." In The Making of Mississippian Tradition. University Press of Florida, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9781683401612.003.0003.

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This chapter describes previous and recent archaeological investigations at the Audrey-North site (11Ge20) in the Lower Illinois River Valley. The Center for American Archaeology excavated from 1975 to 1983, exposing both Late Woodland and Cahokia-style structures, a circular sweatlodge, pit features, and a palisade segment. In 2000, Colleen Delaney-Rivera analyzed the ceramic artifacts recovered, identifying Woodland- and Mississippian-period pottery in addition to hybrid pots and non-local vessels. A magnetic gradiometry survey of the site in 2014 revealed two areas of interest for excavation: one Mississippian house and one unidentified anomaly. The house area was exposed with a backhoe, revealing a Stirling-phase (AD 1100–1200) wall trench house and associated pit features. Excavations over the other anomaly revealed a small early Mississippian wall trench structure, the floor of which was lined with yellow clay.
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