“This volume is valuable as a landmark in Southeastern research." —Southeastern Archaeology
“Mason’s work presents the analysis and interpretation of a large body of material excavated by Works Progress Administration archaeologists during the 1930s and, in this case, continued into the 1940s. Large-scale projects, undertaken by field crews numbering in the hundreds of workers, amassed quantities of artifactual material and supporting documentation. In many instances, substantial amounts of material remain unanalyzed and unreported to this day. . . . The Ocmulgee Old Fields site with its mix of indigenous and European people, local material culture and trade goods, and varied functions represents an opportunity to study the Lower Creeks between 1670 and 1717. . . . I recommend (this volume) to all colleagues laboring to understand the early historic peiod in the Southeast.” —The Florida Anthropologist
“A masterful blend of meticulous archaeological analysis and wide-ranging historical research . . . with extraordinary style and wisdom.”
—Journal of Field Archaeology
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“A classic study of Contact period archaeology. . . . This volume examines the late 17th-early 18th century Creek village and fortified English trading post on the Macon Plateau. . . . An exemplary model for Contact archaeology studies today.”
—Journal of Middle Atlantic Archaeology
“Mason’s work significantly advanced Creek archaeology in general and the archaeology of European-Indian contact studies in particular. She combined excellent historical research with archaeological analysis, yielding a historical archaeological synthesis that was groundbreaking for the emerging discipline of historical archaeology. . . . Her description of the European trading post and analysis of aboriginal features intruding this European feature are extremely detailed. She was able to document Native use of the trading post area by the Creeks after the post was abandoned.”
—from the new Foreword by Marvin T. Smith
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