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Koster: Americans in Search of Their Prehistoric Past

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This firsthand account of the Koster Excavation in Illinois describes what may have been the home of the Paleo-Indians who inhabited North America 10,000 years before Christ

Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1979

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Stuart Struever

7 books1 follower

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
66 reviews1 follower
July 18, 2023
Archeology dig near Kampsville, Illinois in the 1970’s uncovered multiple occupations dating back 7,000 years. Fantastic book-especially fascinating because it is close to where we live. Highly recommend,
Profile Image for Michael Norwitz.
Author 16 books12 followers
September 2, 2023
Written in 1970 (thus slightly outdated in some of its techniques and attitudes), still a fine introduction to archeological methodology, and a good overview of research into the Koster site, a dig uncovering Native American artifacts which have dated back several thousand years.
Profile Image for Todd Wittenmyer.
Author 6 books21 followers
January 6, 2020
4.5 on this nonfiction book! If you are into archeology and Native American culture you will enjoy this one! Cheers my friends!
Profile Image for Margaret.
1,177 reviews3 followers
April 30, 2015
When I was in high school in White Hall, Illinois, I was vaguely aware there was archaeological digging going on in the county. With no further information, and no internet, I was curious, but there didn't seem to be any way to learn more. Our dad took us to see some Indian mounds, but with no interpretive center, again there seemed no way to learn more. It was frustrating, but actually there wasn't a lot more known then anyway.

In 1966 I married, graduated college, and left the state. Just in time to completely miss a 9 year excavation digging down through well over 8000 years of prehistory, pretty much in the backyard of my home town.

Struever writes a quite readable, informative book about the various layers of habitation found at this site in Lowilva, as he calls the Lower Illinois Valley, and what they imply for the customs and lifestyle of the inhabitants.

For example, farming was only relied on the last 1000 years more or less, when the population seems to have increased enough to over-strain the bountiful resources of the region that had allowed people to easily gather crops in abundance. Moving to farming greatly lowered the lifespan and health of the people. A lesson for our times.

There was little genetics change over the millenia. The same genetic populations came and camped or lived there, time after time. No big invasions, no influx of dissimilar peoples. Why war over territory when there is enough for all?

My thanks to the unknown donor who brought this book to the thrift store. The internet has been a boon in answering questions I had had long ago and thought I would never be able to have answered. But for these answers I went back to my old standby, a book.

Profile Image for University of Chicago Magazine.
419 reviews28 followers
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March 17, 2014
Felicia Antonelli Holton, AB'50, and Stuart Struever, PhD'68
Authors

From our pages (Spring/86): "The authors use the Koster site in Illinois, which dates back to 7500 B.C., as a model to show how American archeologists are attempting to bring science into their methodology. Analysis of the findings from Koster revealed that Amerindians were living in settled communities much earlier than had been assumed. In 1979 Library Journal voted this book 'one of the 100 best sci/tech books of the year.'"
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews