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Ceramic petrography and hopewell interaction / Керамическая петрография и взаимодействие Хоупвелла
This work could not even have been attempted, much less completed, without the help of numerous friends and colleagues. In roughly chronological order (my sample collecting formally began in 1985), I extend my sincerest thanks to the following people, beginning with those based in Ohio institutions: N’omi Greber and David Brose, then at the Cleveland Museum of Natural History; Olaf Prufer and Mark Seeman at Kent State University; Martha Potter Otto of the Ohio Historical Society; Rick Yerkes and Bill Dancey at The Ohio State University. Jim Brown (of Northwestern University) was instrumental in getting sherds from Mound City for thin sectioning and together we collected most of the soil samples recorded in Table 3.15. Sissel Schroeder, in a trip across southern Ohio, collected glacial Lake Tight sediment samples for me. In addition Jim Morton of Columbus, Ohio, was an nterested supporter of this work and was instrumental in procuring a sherd for thin sectioning from the Knight Hollow Rockshelter simple-stamped vessel. It was an enormous pleasure to meet and visit with Robert Harness about working on samples from “his” site. I must also offer an additional special thank you to N’omi Greber for her extraordinary cooperation throughout this project, particularly for her role in procuring sherds from the Peabody Museum at Harvard University where the Turner site collections reside. <...>