Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 144
pro vyhledávání: '"R. Bruce McMillan"'
Autor:
Griffin, James B.
Publikováno v:
Plains Anthropologist, 1978 May 01. 23(80), 163-165.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/25667459
Autor:
Krause, Richard A.
Publikováno v:
American Antiquity, 1977 Apr 01. 42(2), 291-292.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/278994
Autor:
Gramly, Richard Michael
Publikováno v:
The Quarterly Review of Biology, 1977 Sep 01. 52(3), 330-331.
Externí odkaz:
https://www.jstor.org/stable/2824264
Autor:
R. BRUCE MCMILLAN
Publikováno v:
Earth Sciences History. 42:84-101
This is the second essay of a two-part series on the life and collecting activities of Albert Koch. After Koch traveled to England where he sold his Missourium to the British Museum, the American mastodon that now stands in the Natural History Museum
Autor:
R. BRUCE MCMILLAN
Publikováno v:
Earth Sciences History. 41:410-439
Albert Koch was one of those fascinating characters who burst upon the American scene in the early nineteenth century. He was a fossil collector who has been lauded and ridiculed by both scientists and laymen alike. After collecting natural history s
Autor:
Richard A. Krause
Publikováno v:
American Antiquity. 42:291-292
Autor:
Richard Michael Gramly
Publikováno v:
The Quarterly Review of Biology. 52:330-331
Autor:
R. Bruce McMillan
Publikováno v:
Plains Anthropologist. 64:382-413
Indigenous people throughout Native America often bestowed special meaning and veneration upon certain landscape features. This is the case for a series of artesian springs in the upper Osage River...
Autor:
R. Bruce McMillan
Publikováno v:
Earth Sciences History. 35:354-374
The Kimmswick ‘bone bed’, a late Wisconsin paleontological locality in Jefferson County, Missouri, south of St. Louis, has been known since the early nineteenth century. The site gained international recognition in 1843 when a German immigrant an
Autor:
R. Bruce McMillan
Publikováno v:
Plains Anthropologist. 54:101-112
The career of w. Raymond Wood is reviewed in terms of his contributions to interdisciplinary studies in archaeology. This paper contends that his academic training at the University of Nebraska and the University of Oregon influenced this holistic ap