Papers by John Ludwickson
published in1999 by the Nebraska State Historical Society and other sources. This lesson was writ... more published in1999 by the Nebraska State Historical Society and other sources. This lesson was written by archaeologist Eric Kaldahl for the NebraskaStudies.org website, which is a production of NET, the Nebraska State Historical Society,
Plains Anthropologist, 1982
Plains Anthropologist, 1994
Plains Anthropologist, 1982
Lippincott: Krause's criticisms of my paper form a defense of his earlier publications (1969,... more Lippincott: Krause's criticisms of my paper form a defense of his earlier publications (1969, 1970) which present a different view of Solomon River sites. His version has gained currency in the literature. It was used by Johnson (1973) to support an interpretation regarding the temporal distribution of large and small earth lodges. It is also mentioned as a possible construct in Wedel's draft chapter on the Central Plains Traditions for the Handbook of North American Indians (Wedel n.d.). If Krause's errors persist, they will continue to confuse future researchers in volved in literature reviews. It should also be observed that while Krause's polemic is directed against my paper in the symposium volume, he had access to these interpretations which were presented in my dissertation as early as 1974, and chapters of the dissertation were sent to him for review as they were completed in 1976. Yet prior to his present review, the only substantive comment from him which I...
Report prepared by the Highway Archeology Program …, 1994
Ethnohistory, 1992
The distribution of and means of acquiring chiefly office within nineteenth-century Omaha society... more The distribution of and means of acquiring chiefly office within nineteenth-century Omaha society are examined. Analysis of the composition and ordering of groups of individuals signing documents, and of genealogical data, shows that chiefly office was distributed and ...
Transactions of the Nebraska …, 1979
Hypotheses which concern human" migration" within and without the Central Subarea of th... more Hypotheses which concern human" migration" within and without the Central Subarea of the Great Plains during the Late Prehistoric period are examined. The popular notion that peoples from central Nebraska migrated to the Panhandle region of Texas-...
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Papers by John Ludwickson