
James Allison Brown
1934
17 works on record
Biography
Jim Brown is an archaeologist with broad interests in the aboriginal cultures of the North America, past and present. His research has been directed towards detailed examination of social and cultural complexity in the Eastern Woodlands of North America. Critical to this endeavor has been an effort to move the archaeological debate from typically parochial concerns to a globally based framework that allows the archaeological record of the Eastern Woodlands to be examined cross-culturally. Currently, he has been concentrating on religious and social changes over the past 1000 years. Iconography has been employed as a route to the study of religion, canonical representation and craft specialization.-faculty profile
Works

The Spiro Ceremonial Center
1996

Pre-Columbian shell engravings
1975

The Gentleman Farm site
1967

The Zimmerman site

Prehistoric hunter-gatherers

Archaic hunters and gatherers in the American Midwest

At the edge of prehistory

Essays on archaeological typology

The social decentration and cultural understanding of selected Canadian children
Aboriginal cultural adaptions in the Midwestern prairies
Aboriginal cultural adaptions in the Midwestern prairies
1991
The Gentleman Farm site, La Salle County, Illinois
The Gentleman Farm site, La Salle County, Illinois
Oneota studies
Oneota studies
Phillips/brown
Phillips/brown
Approaches to the social dimensions of mortuary practices
Approaches to the social dimensions of mortuary practices
Mound City
Mound City
Spiro Ceremonial Center
Spiro Ceremonial Center
Prehistoric Southern Ozark Marginality
Prehistoric Southern Ozark Marginality