Mountain Fork Archaeology: A Preliminary Report on the Ramos Creek Site (34MC1030)

In May-June of 2010, the University of Oklahoma and the Oklahoma Archeological Survey co-sponsored a field school at the Ramos Creek site (34MC1030) in southeastern Oklahoma. Ramos Creek is located in the Ouachita Mountains along the Mountain Fork, a tributary of the Little River. Recently identifie...

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Main Author: Dowd, Elsbeth L.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: SFA ScholarWorks 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita/vol2011/iss1/22
https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2267&context=ita
id ftsfstateaustin:oai:scholarworks.sfasu.edu:ita-2267
record_format openpolar
spelling ftsfstateaustin:oai:scholarworks.sfasu.edu:ita-2267 2023-05-15T14:17:46+02:00 Mountain Fork Archaeology: A Preliminary Report on the Ramos Creek Site (34MC1030) Dowd, Elsbeth L. 2011-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita/vol2011/iss1/22 https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2267&context=ita unknown SFA ScholarWorks https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita/vol2011/iss1/22 https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2267&context=ita http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ CC-BY Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State American Southeast Caddo American Material Culture American Studies Anthropology Archaeological Anthropology Environmental Studies History History of Art Architecture and Archaeology Other American Studies Other Arts and Humanities Other History of Art United States History text 2011 ftsfstateaustin 2022-03-24T20:26:19Z In May-June of 2010, the University of Oklahoma and the Oklahoma Archeological Survey co-sponsored a field school at the Ramos Creek site (34MC1030) in southeastern Oklahoma. Ramos Creek is located in the Ouachita Mountains along the Mountain Fork, a tributary of the Little River. Recently identified by the U.S. Forest Service (USFS), this site is the northernmost known site with a Caddo component along this stream (Figure 1). The best-known Caddo sites identified for this drainage were tested during the Oklahoma River Basin Survey project of the 1960s and today are covered by the man-made Broken Bow Lake. Archaeological investigations along the Mountain Fork have been conducted by Wyckoff, Klinger and Cande, Perttula, and Perttula and Nelson. This past summer’s work at Ramos Creek is part of a broader research program addressing several questions: What was the relationship of Ramos Creek to sites further downstream, including the multimound Woods Mound Group? How were the Caddo sites in this drainage organized politically and what social dynamics shaped their history? Is there a better way of understanding the socio-political organization of these communities than applying models used in other parts of the Caddo area and the wider Southeast? How were these communities related to those living in other parts of the Caddo archaeological area, including the rest of the Ouachita Mountains, the Little River Valley, the Red River Valley, and the Arkansas Valley? Text Archeological Survey Stephen F. Austin State University, Texas: Scholar Works @ SFA Ramos ENVELOPE(-59.700,-59.700,-62.500,-62.500) Little River ENVELOPE(-135.687,-135.687,60.894,60.894) Perttula ENVELOPE(25.750,25.750,67.133,67.133) Bow Lake ENVELOPE(-114.351,-114.351,62.517,62.517)
institution Open Polar
collection Stephen F. Austin State University, Texas: Scholar Works @ SFA
op_collection_id ftsfstateaustin
language unknown
topic American Southeast
Caddo
American Material Culture
American Studies
Anthropology
Archaeological Anthropology
Environmental Studies
History
History of Art
Architecture
and Archaeology
Other American Studies
Other Arts and Humanities
Other History of Art
United States History
spellingShingle American Southeast
Caddo
American Material Culture
American Studies
Anthropology
Archaeological Anthropology
Environmental Studies
History
History of Art
Architecture
and Archaeology
Other American Studies
Other Arts and Humanities
Other History of Art
United States History
Dowd, Elsbeth L.
Mountain Fork Archaeology: A Preliminary Report on the Ramos Creek Site (34MC1030)
topic_facet American Southeast
Caddo
American Material Culture
American Studies
Anthropology
Archaeological Anthropology
Environmental Studies
History
History of Art
Architecture
and Archaeology
Other American Studies
Other Arts and Humanities
Other History of Art
United States History
description In May-June of 2010, the University of Oklahoma and the Oklahoma Archeological Survey co-sponsored a field school at the Ramos Creek site (34MC1030) in southeastern Oklahoma. Ramos Creek is located in the Ouachita Mountains along the Mountain Fork, a tributary of the Little River. Recently identified by the U.S. Forest Service (USFS), this site is the northernmost known site with a Caddo component along this stream (Figure 1). The best-known Caddo sites identified for this drainage were tested during the Oklahoma River Basin Survey project of the 1960s and today are covered by the man-made Broken Bow Lake. Archaeological investigations along the Mountain Fork have been conducted by Wyckoff, Klinger and Cande, Perttula, and Perttula and Nelson. This past summer’s work at Ramos Creek is part of a broader research program addressing several questions: What was the relationship of Ramos Creek to sites further downstream, including the multimound Woods Mound Group? How were the Caddo sites in this drainage organized politically and what social dynamics shaped their history? Is there a better way of understanding the socio-political organization of these communities than applying models used in other parts of the Caddo area and the wider Southeast? How were these communities related to those living in other parts of the Caddo archaeological area, including the rest of the Ouachita Mountains, the Little River Valley, the Red River Valley, and the Arkansas Valley?
format Text
author Dowd, Elsbeth L.
author_facet Dowd, Elsbeth L.
author_sort Dowd, Elsbeth L.
title Mountain Fork Archaeology: A Preliminary Report on the Ramos Creek Site (34MC1030)
title_short Mountain Fork Archaeology: A Preliminary Report on the Ramos Creek Site (34MC1030)
title_full Mountain Fork Archaeology: A Preliminary Report on the Ramos Creek Site (34MC1030)
title_fullStr Mountain Fork Archaeology: A Preliminary Report on the Ramos Creek Site (34MC1030)
title_full_unstemmed Mountain Fork Archaeology: A Preliminary Report on the Ramos Creek Site (34MC1030)
title_sort mountain fork archaeology: a preliminary report on the ramos creek site (34mc1030)
publisher SFA ScholarWorks
publishDate 2011
url https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita/vol2011/iss1/22
https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2267&context=ita
long_lat ENVELOPE(-59.700,-59.700,-62.500,-62.500)
ENVELOPE(-135.687,-135.687,60.894,60.894)
ENVELOPE(25.750,25.750,67.133,67.133)
ENVELOPE(-114.351,-114.351,62.517,62.517)
geographic Ramos
Little River
Perttula
Bow Lake
geographic_facet Ramos
Little River
Perttula
Bow Lake
genre Archeological Survey
genre_facet Archeological Survey
op_source Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
op_relation https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita/vol2011/iss1/22
https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2267&context=ita
op_rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
_version_ 1766289655778508800