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7 Sites

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 June 2018

Extract

For purposes of this study, the Appalachian archaeological region of Georgia will designate that part of the state north of the following course from the South Carolina border in the northeast, southwestward to Alabama: the confluence of the Chatooga and Tallulah Rivers, thence along the northwest boundary of Banks County to a point just south of Gainesville, along an irregular line midway between the Chattahoochee Drainage on the south and the Etowah Drainage on the north. This meandering course passes through northern Forsyth County, south along the right bank of Vickery Creek to Alpharetta, westward through Cobb County north of Marietta to Dallas in Paulding County, thence almost due west, skirting the headwaters of Pumpkinvine Creek and following the Polk-Caralson county line to Alabama

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society for American Archaeology 1966

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References

Notes

page 212 note * In this report I have made no attempt to bring up to date the names of farms, or of their owners or tenants, nor have I checked to find out which sites are now obliterated by new lakes or other construction.

page 372 note * Jones had previously (1873: 123-124) referred to Bartram's description, but apparently he did not visit this site himself until several years later.

page 375 note * For the story of Nancy Hart, see White 1849: 234-238.

page 410 note * General William Mcintosh, son of a Scotsman and an Indian mother, was killed by the natives in Carroll County (White 1854: 295).