The proposed 11,000 BP age of the LSU Mounds in Baton Rouge
is critically reevaluated at:
McGimsey, C., Saunders, R. Homburg, J., Hawkins, N., McKillop, H.,
and Mann, R., 2022. The Age and Construction of the LSU Campus
Mounds: Consideration of Ellwood and Colleagues (2022). The SAA,
Archaheological Record. 22(5), pp. 18-27.
Open access PDF avilable at:
[
mydigitalpublication.com]
Or linked at “2022 – Volume 22,” list of issues at:
[
www.saa.org]
PDF of entire issue linked at 2022 – Volume 22, list of issues at:
[
www.saa.org]
There is another discussion of the LSU Mounds dating at:
Oldest Mound Site in North America? with Dr. Shane Miller
and Dr. Jesse Tune - Ep 126 A Life In Ruins
[
podcasts.apple.com]
The paywalled paper that the above paper and podcast
critically discusses is:
Ellwood, B.B., Warny, S., Hackworth, R.A., Ellwood, S.H., Tomkin,
J.H., Bentley, S.J., Braud, D.H. and Clayton, G.C., 2022. The LSU
campus mounds, with construction beginning at 11,000 BP, are the
oldest known extant man-made structures in the Americas. American
Journal of Science, 322(6), pp.795-827.
[
www.ajsonline.org]
Yours,
Paul H.
"The past is never dead. It's not even past."
William Faulkner, Act 1, Scene III, Requiem for a Nun (1951)
Edited 5 time(s). Last edit at 11/30/2022 09:50PM by Paul H..