The Columbus Dispatch: Old Farmstead's Garbage is as Good as Any Diary
Researchers unearth glimpse of Adena hunter-to-farmer shift
The Ironton Tribune: Progress vs. Preservation: Archeologists excavating at The Point
The Marion Star: Archaeologists excavate Harding Home’s old kitchen in time for 100th anniversary
Ohio History Connection Archaeology Blog: Unraveling the story of Warren G. Harding
"Archaeology of the Tarr Log House: an historic farmstead in eastern Ohio" North American Archaeologist 2013; 34(1), 1-47.
"Uncovering a Mid-Nineteenth Century Maple Sugar Camp and Stone Furnace at the Petticrew-Taylor Farmstead in Southwest Ohio" Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 2010; 35(2), 133-166.
"The Settler's Ridge Site, An Early Woodland Leimbach Phase Upland Encampment in Northern Ohio" North American Archaeologist 2009; 30(1), 23-55.
"Early Woodland Upland Encampments of Central Ohio" Midcontinental Journal of Archaeology 2007; 32(2), 263-299.
"Historical Archaeology At The Clarkson Mine, An Eastern Ohio Mining Complex" North American Archaeologist 2003; 24(2), 129-166.
"Examination and Distribution of Woodland Period Sites Along the Twin Creek Drainage in Southwestern Ohio" North American Archaeologist 1999; 20(4), 319-346.
"The Impact of Iroquoian Populations on the Northern Distribution of Pawpaws in the Northeast" North American Archaeologist 1997; 18(4), 327-342.
View of the fully excavated Feature 7 (earthen oven). The feature had top diameter of 128cm, a bottom diameter of 106cm, and a depth of 56cm. The base of the pit was lined with approximately 15cm band of charcoal and an approximately 4cm band of fire-reddened soil. The feature contained a total of 560 artifacts including 101 lithics, 4 pottery fragments, and 455 pieces of fire-cracked rock (FCR) weighing a total of 348.2 kg (767.6 lb). Most of the FCR in this feature was 64 mm to 128 mm or greater in size, several rocks weighed as much as 22.7 to 27.2 kg (50 to 60 lbs).