Home / Search
148 results for "Croton Point"
Filter:
All
· 🏹 Indigenous Peoples & Archaeology
· 📜 Colonial & Dutch Records
· 📖 Westchester County Histories
· 🏘️ Croton Local History
· 🏛️ Government Documents
Various (1971)
— source
[Various (1971)] Comments on vessel size and surface finish are based on two completely restored vessels and three partially restored vessels. The criteria used to analyze the pottery vessels are exterior surface finish, interior surface finish, tempering material, decoration technique…
Various (1971)
— source
…In the southeastern sites the temporal range of the point styles reported for Staten Island is as much as 2000 years on radiocarbon or estimated dates, or between c. 8000-6000 B.C. There are C-14 dates on charcoal…
Various (1971)
— source
[Various (1971)] This process of material substitution probably involved significant technological and motor habit changes, since both the stone represented-quartz, quartzite and flint-and the form of its occurrence, in shore or bank pebbles or in quarried strata, differed…
Louis A. Brennan et al. (1962)
— source
[Louis A. Brennan et al. (1962)] Drieger wrote "Looking back, one may well wonder why the original discovery of the Tule Springs locality in 1933, with its evidences of contemporaneity of man and extinct Pleistocene fauna as reported in that…
Various (1971)
— source
…52, July 1971 9 center, as a probable derivative of the Lehigh Broad point complex, and the initial manifestation of the Susquehanna tradition to appear in New York (Ritchie 1961: 47-48; 1965a: 134-141). At the key site on…
Louis A. Brennan et al. (1962)
— source
…A few "strike-a-lights" and one meadowood* point, probably a stray from Point Peninsula times were also found. To date, we can compare the NOK site chronologically with a somewhat similar site, the Oakfield Site. From this it appears…
Various (1971)
— source
[Various (1971)] This fact introduces a major point in my perspective of the Archaic cultures in New York, namely, that the most plausible explanation for this distributional picture of the Brewerton phase was the approximately concurrent presence in south-central…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
— source
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)] land, 365 Hobokenhacking, Hoboken, 376 Haquequenunck, Patterson, 376 Hannakrois creek, 397 Hoosack, Rensselaer county, 376 Ishpatinck, Brooklyn Heights, 376 Jogee Hill, Orange county, 382 Kapsee, Copsie Point, New York, 361 Kitchawonck, Croton river, 366 Kittatenny, Anthony…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1906)
— source
…Trumbull from _Mat'uhtugh-ohke,_ "Place without wood," from which extended to the stream. (See Mattituck and Sackonck.) Navish is claimed as the name of Teller's (now Croton) Point, on a reading of the Indian deed of 1683: "All…
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
— source
…the mouth of the Croton, is represented as one of the most formidable and ancient of the Indian fortresses south of the Highlands. Its precise location was at the entrance or neck of Teller's point (called Senasqua), and west…
Various (1971)
— source
…It is important to note that, while these and other point forms of the narrow point tradition definitely overlie the Laurentian in eastern New York (Funk 1965) and in southern New England (Ritchie 1965b; 1969b), radiocarbon dates which unequivocally relate…
Louis A. Brennan et al. (1962)
— source
…We are satisfied at this time that most of these bands had each its own peculiarity in projectile point style and that of ten, when several styles are found at a site they indicate only that several different bands camped…
Various (1971)
— source
…165-166, Point Peninsula Ceremonialism in the Light of Recent Discoveries in New York. Eastern States Archeological Federation Bulletin, No. 11, pp. 7-8, Harrisburg, Pa. New Finds Relating to the Early Point Peninsula Burial Complex. Eastern States Archeological Federation…
Various (1971)
— source
…The persistence of the Wading River type point on Martha's Vineyard into post-Squibnocket times was clearly revealed by our discoveries, especially in Stratum 1B at the Hornblower II site, where it may have survived into an early ceramic…
Various (1971)
— source
…The clearest evidence that the Genesee point relates to a definite complex of Late Archaic times, and is not simply a widely diffused point style which infiltrated a number of different phases on the same temporal horizon, as was the…
Various (1971)
— source
[Various (1971)] 1971 1972 21 Northeastern Crossties with the Arctic. In, Prehistoric Cultural Relations Between the Arctic and Temperate Zones of North America, ed. by John M, Campbell, Arctic Institute of North America, Technical Paper No. 11, pp. 96-99…
Various (1971)
— source
…The narrow point tradition clearly had its roots to the south of our area, presumably in the Middle Atlantic region. It seems to be widely spread throughout the Coastal Plain, piedmont and much of the Appalachian Highland province. For this…
Various (1971)
— source
[Various (1971)] Program, NYSAA Annual Meeting 40 No. 52, July 1971 1 THE ARCHAIC REVISITED A Preface The announcement by Dr. William A. Ritchie at the NYSAA State Conference at Binghampton, April 1618, that he was retiring on May 1…
Louis A. Brennan et al. (1962)
— source
…Brennan et al. (1962)] We have found just one of these at Kettle Rock and they are certainly not prominent in what we have named the Q tradition along the Hudson, which is the narrow-bladed point tradition and which…
Various (1971)
— source
[Various (1971)] Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences, Rochester, N.Y. Algonkin-Iroquois Contacts in New York State. Bulletin of Archaeological Society of Delaware, Volume 1, No. 2, pp. 2-6. Dover, Del. Indian Mounds in the Genesee Valley, Museum…
Various (1971)
— source
…The sides rise very quickly from the valley floor which is only a mile at its widest point. The river flows in a northeast/southwest direction at this point between Red House and Cold Spring, New York. The river has…
Various (1971)
— source
…There is in every case a perplexing association in a single stratigraphic zone of several point types which occur only in separate horizons of the North Carolina and West Virginia sites described by Coe and Broyles.
Various (1971)
— source
[Various (1971)] The Archaeology of Martha's Vineyard: A Framework for the Prehistory of Southern New Eng land. A Study in Coastal Ecology and Adaptation. The Natural History Press. The American Museum of Natural History. 270 pp. Garden City, New…
Various (1971)
— source
[Various (1971)] It therefore appears that the Lamoka was the 6 THE BULLETIN earliest known culture of the narrow point tradition to enter New York and that its route into the south-central region was at that time relatively unobstructed…
Various (1971)
— source
[Various (1971)] The extended burial which produced the bone, Number 78, was that of a young male who had been richly provided with grave goods, including such characteristic Laurentian traits as a ground slate point or knife and chopper.2…
Various (1971)
— source
…This typology, followed by his highly successful projectile point typology published in 1961, provided keys, which have since unlocked many doors in the mansion of northeastern prehistory.
Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)
— source
…255 Croton, traditionary sachem of Kitcha-wongs, 79 Croton river, aboriginal name of, 79, 366 Croghan, George, commissioner to treat with Western Indians, 209 5 assistant to Sir Wm. Johnson, 250, 259; superintendent of Ohio country, 260 Crown Point, expedition…
Various (1971)
— source
[Various (1971)] In this volume, expected to be in print late in 1971, we have presented our current views, stemming largely from Ritchie's earlier syntheses, on the development of Indian cultures within their total environment-physical, biological, and cultural…
Various (1971)
— source
…Cultures of the Susquehanna tradition directly follow and clearly overlap recognized complexes of the narrow point tradition in the Hudson Valley (Ritchie 1958; Funk 1965; n.d.), on Long Island (Ritchie 1959), Martha's Vineyard (Ritchie 1969b: 219-223), and…
Various (1971)
— source
…Kneberg, Madeline 1956 Some Important Projectile Point Types found in the Tennessee Area. Tennessee Archaeologist, Vol. XII, No. 1, pp. 17-18. Knoxville. Kraft, Herbert C. 1970 The Miller Field Site, Warren County, N.J. Part 1. The Archaic and…