List of works
Book chapter
Published 01/01/2020
Modeling Entradas, 126 - 145
Book chapter
Published 03/27/2018
Florida's Lost Galleon, 254
The Emanuel Point Shipwreck helped to persuade the University of West Florida to begin a program of maritime archaeology. Those students ultimately continued the survey of Pensacola Bay, finding another Luna shipwreck near the first one and then, recently, a third sister ship in the fleet. Above the shipwrecks on the Emanuel Point Bluff, remnants of the settlement site have also been found, creating an unparalleled opportunity to study the maritime and terrestrial components of that forgotten chapter and bring its remains to light.
Book chapter
Laboratory Archaeology: Conservation of Florida’s Waterlogged Artifacts
Published 03/15/2018
Submerged history: underwater archaeology in Florida
Book chapter
Archaeology in the Laboratory: Artifact Conservation
Published 01/01/2018
Florida's Lost Galleon: The Emanuel Point Shipwreck, 207 - 223
Book chapter
Published 01/01/2018
Florida's Lost Galleon: The Emanuel Point Shipwreck, 254 - 259
Book chapter
Published 2018
Florida's Lost Galleon, 236 - 253
Book chapter
What They Left Behind: The Artifact Assemblage
Published 2018
Florida’s Lost Galleon: The Emanuel Point Shipwreck, 122 - 206
Book chapter
The University of West Florida’s Maritime Field School Experience
Published 2012
Global Perspectives on Archaeological Field Schools: Constructions of Knowledge and Experience, 147 - 164
Book chapter
The Continental Gondola Philadelphia: A Case Study
Published 2001
Spitfire Management Plan, 111 - 115
Book chapter
The Rustler Hills Economic Pollen Spectrum
Published 2001
Prehistory of the Rustler Hills: Grando Cave, 237 - 261
Archaeologists frequently make use of plant remains recovered from prehistoric sites to reconstruct ancient dietary and medicinal practices. These reconstructions, however, can be biased due to a number of factors, including contamination of the site by wind, water, or burrowing animals (Sobolik and Gerick 1992). Moreover, the degree of plant preservation within a site is usually variable (Bryant 1989). Cultural transformations may have also taken place that led the prehistoric peoples to utilize plants for purposes other than food—for example, for clothing, shelter, and basketry.