Ford, James Alfred, 1911-1968
Ford, James Alfred
Ford, James A.
James A. Ford American archaeologist (1911-1968)
Ford, James A. (James Alfred), 1911-1968
VIAF ID: 64134070 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/64134070
Preferred Forms
- 200 _ | ‡a Ford ‡b James Alfred ‡f 1911-1968
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Ford, James Alfred
- 100 1 _ ‡a Ford, James Alfred
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Ford, James Alfred ‡d 1911-1968
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Ford, James Alfred, ‡d 1911-1968
- 100 1 _ ‡a Ford, James Alfred, ‡d 1911-1968
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Ford, James Alfred, ‡d 1911-1968
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- 100 0 _ ‡a James A. Ford ‡c American archaeologist (1911-1968)
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (20)
Works
Title | Sources |
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Analysis of Indian village site collections from Louisiana and Mississippi | |
Archaeological regions of Colombia : a ceramic survey | |
Archaeological survey in the Lower Mississippi Alluvial Valley, 1940-1947 | |
Ceramic decoration sequence at an old indian village site near Sicily Island, Louisiana | |
A comparison of formative cultures in the Americas, diffusion or the psychic unity of man | |
The correspondence of William I. & Bismarck, with other letters from and to Prince Bismarck. | |
Crooks site, a Marksville period burial mound in La Salle Parish, Louisiana | |
Eskimo prehistory in the vicinity of Point Barrow, Alaska | |
Excavations in the vicinity of Cali, Colombia | |
Greenhouse: a Troyville-Coles Creek period site in Avoyelles Parish, Louisiana | |
Hopewell culture burial mounds near Helena, Arkansas | |
An interpretation of the prehistory of the Eastern United States | |
The Jaketown site in west-central Mississippi | |
James Alfred Ford, the man and his works, 1978: | |
Lettere | |
Measurements of some prehistoric design developments in the Southeastern States | |
Menard site: the Quapaw village of Osotouy on the Arkansas River. | |
Método cuantitativo para establecer cronologías culturales | |
Poverty Point, a late archaic site in Louisiana | |
Quantitative method for deriving cultural chronology | |
Surface survey of the Virú valley, Peru | |
The Tchefuncte culture, an early occupation of the Lower Mississippi Valley |