The Palynology Of Two Archaeological Sites In The Southeast Missouri Ozarks
- 16 November 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Plains Anthropologist
- Vol. 34 (126) , 293-308
- https://doi.org/10.1080/2052546.1989.11909534
Abstract
Palynological investigations of two archaeological sites-Round Spring Shelter, Round Spring Site 23SH19 and Gooseneck Site 23CT54 located in Shannon and Carter counties, Missouri-provide botanical information associated with Indian occupation. The pollen sequence from Round Spring Shelter suggests the presence of a pine-oak forest in the vicinity of Round Spring. Based on associated Middle Woodland artifacts, the pine-oak forest may be dated from approximately 500 B. C. and continues to the present. However, the pollen spectra from Gooseneck Site 23CT54 indicate a mixed oak-hickory forest in the locality for an Early Mississippian Naylor Phase occupation (ca. A.D. 650-850). The palynological data from the archaeological sites provide part of the Holocene vegetational record in an area previously unstudied.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
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