
(Selected Pictures from the April Journal)
| On the Cover This beautiful Double Crescent bannerstone is known as the Zuni Double Crescent Bannerstone. It was discovered near the town Zuni, in Isle of Wight County, Virginia. It is 5 3/4 inches long 5 3/8 inches high, and 1 1/4 inches thick. It dates to the Archaic period. It is made of fine banded-slate from the Mid-West. It is from the collection of James G. Pritchard, of Suffolk, Virginia. |
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| The Last, “On the Surface” | John T. Crowley |
66 |
| A Shoestring Away | Neal Spalding |
67 |
| A Message from the President: “Meet the President” | Jack Willhoit |
68 |
| A Unique Find | Howard King |
70 |
| An Old Broken Jar | Earl Thomas Rice |
72 |
| It Was Mysteriously Heavy | Donna M. Parker |
74 |
| Two Arrow Straighteners from California | Warren Boatwright |
76 |
| The Myth of Clovis, Part ll the Evolution of Paleoindian Projectile Point Styles | Juliet E. Morrow Ph.D. |
79 |
| On Our Cover: The Zuni Double Crescent Bannerstone | Rodney M. Peck |
84 |
| An Ancient Cache Recovered. | Gary Klebe |
86 |
| A Rare North Carolina Boatstone | Jim Maus |
88 |
| Some Information on the Etley | Alan Banks |
90 |
| Hardaway Origins and Adaptations | Rodney M. Peck |
99 |
| The Minutes of the Central States Archaeological Societies Inc. | Rick Stevens |
110 |
| You Never Know What You Might Find | Al Downs |
112 |
| A Knife River Flint Clovis Point from St. Charles County, Missouri | Mathew G. Hall and Larry Van Gorden |
114 |
| Getting a Late Start, or “It’s About Time” | Alan Harrison |
116 |
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© 1990 C.S.A.S.I. Last modified:
June 12 2005