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T H O M A S J. P L U C K H A H N Department of Anthropology The University of South Florida 4202 E. Fowler Ave., SOC107 Tampa, FL 33620-8100 [email protected] 813-549-9742 EDUCATION Ph.D., 2002, Anthropology, University of Georgia. M.A., 1994, Anthropology, University of Georgia. B.A., 1988, cum laude with Honors, Anthropology (Spanish minor), University of Georgia. ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS 2017-present Professor. Department of Anthropology, University of South Florida. 2014-2017 Associate Chair. Department of Anthropology, University of South Florida. 2010-2017 Associate Professor. Department of Anthropology, University of South Florida. 2006-2010 Assistant Professor. Department of Anthropology, University of South Florida. 2004-2006 Assistant Professor. Department of Anthropology, University of Oklahoma. 2003-2004 Visiting Assistant Professor. Department of Anthropology, University of Oklahoma. 2001-2002 Instructor. Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia. 1996-2002 Graduate Teaching Assistant. Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia. OTHER PROFESSIONAL APPOINTMENTS 1994-2003 Senior Archaeologist. Southeastern Archeological Services, Inc., Athens, Georgia. 1999 Field Supervisor. Mixteca Alta Settlement Pattern Survey, Oaxaca, Mexico (study funded by the National Science Foundation). 1994 Consulting Archaeologist. Southern Research, Fort Stewart Military Reservation, Georgia. 1993-1994 Project Archaeologist. Brockington and Associates, Norcross, Georgia. 1989-1992 Archaeological field technician for various firms and agencies in the eastern United States and Europe. PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS Society for American Archaeology, 1992-present Southeastern Archaeological Conference, 1992-present (lifetime member since 2010) Florida Archaeological Council, 2006-present Florida Anthropological Society, 2007-present Society for Georgia Archaeology, 1994-present Georgia Council of Professional Archaeologists, 1995-1999

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Page 1: EDUCATION - University of South FloridaT H O M A S J. P L U C K H A H N Department of Anthropology The University of South Florida 4202 E. Fowler Ave., SOC107 Tampa, FL 33620- 8100

T H O M A S J. P L U C K H A H N Department of Anthropology The University of South Florida 4202 E. Fowler Ave., SOC107 Tampa, FL 33620-8100 [email protected] 813-549-9742 EDUCATION Ph.D., 2002, Anthropology, University of Georgia. M.A., 1994, Anthropology, University of Georgia. B.A., 1988, cum laude with Honors, Anthropology (Spanish minor), University of Georgia. ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS 2017-present Professor. Department of Anthropology, University of South Florida. 2014-2017 Associate Chair. Department of Anthropology, University of South Florida. 2010-2017 Associate Professor. Department of Anthropology, University of South Florida. 2006-2010 Assistant Professor. Department of Anthropology, University of South Florida. 2004-2006 Assistant Professor. Department of Anthropology, University of Oklahoma. 2003-2004 Visiting Assistant Professor. Department of Anthropology, University of Oklahoma. 2001-2002 Instructor. Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia. 1996-2002 Graduate Teaching Assistant. Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia. OTHER PROFESSIONAL APPOINTMENTS 1994-2003 Senior Archaeologist. Southeastern Archeological Services, Inc., Athens, Georgia. 1999 Field Supervisor. Mixteca Alta Settlement Pattern Survey, Oaxaca, Mexico (study funded

by the National Science Foundation). 1994 Consulting Archaeologist. Southern Research, Fort Stewart Military Reservation,

Georgia. 1993-1994 Project Archaeologist. Brockington and Associates, Norcross, Georgia. 1989-1992 Archaeological field technician for various firms and agencies in the eastern United

States and Europe. PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS Society for American Archaeology, 1992-present Southeastern Archaeological Conference, 1992-present (lifetime member since 2010) Florida Archaeological Council, 2006-present Florida Anthropological Society, 2007-present Society for Georgia Archaeology, 1994-present Georgia Council of Professional Archaeologists, 1995-1999

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THOMAS J. PLUCKHAHN, PAGE 2

GRANTS AND CONTRACTS Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator, and Victor D. Thompson, co-Principal Investigator (2018). Collaborative Research: Integrated Archaeological and Paleoecological Studies of Sea Tenure and Socioecology of Late Holocene Tampa Bay. National Science Foundation, under review. ($300,731) Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2018). Colonial Encounters at the “Lost” Town of Tocobaga: Archaeological Investigation of the Safety Harbor Site, Florida. USF Creative Scholarship Grant ($10,000). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2017). Florida Department of Environmental Protection. Condition Assessment, Topographic Mapping, Phase I Archaeological Survey, Stabilization, and Preservation Planning for Stanley Mound (8MA127). ($26,000). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2016). Florida Humanities Council Mini-grant. Enhancing the Visitor Experience at Crystal River Archaeological State Park. ($5,000). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2014). Hillsborough County Parks, Recreation and Conservation Department, Conservation Services Section. Archaeological Reconnaissance Survey of Violet Cury Nature Preserve, Hillsborough County, Florida. ($7,521). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2013). Hillsborough County Parks, Recreation and Conservation Department, Conservation Services Section. Cultural Resources Assessment Survey of a Portion of the Lake Dan Preserve, Hillsborough County, Florida. ($7,935). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2012). Hillsborough County Parks, Recreation and Conservation Department, Conservation Services Section. Cultural Resources Assessment Survey of an Extension to the Cypress Creek Nature Preserve, Hillsborough County, Florida. ($6,992). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2011). National Science Foundation, Senior Archaeology Award. Collaborative Research: Sourcing Interaction in the Woodland Period Southeast U.S.: Integrated Approaches to Swift Creek Ceramics. (Total: $118,980; USF portion: $33,745). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2011). Hillsborough County Parks, Recreation and Conservation Department, Conservation Services Section. Cultural Resources Assessment Survey of the Rocky Creek Tract, Hillsborough County, Florida. ($8,294). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator, Brent R. Weisman , co-PI (2010). National Science Foundation, Senior Archaeology Award. Collaborative Research: Cooperation and Competition Crystal River. (Total: $169,943; USF portion $133,981). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2010). Hillsborough County Parks, Recreation and Conservation Department, Conservation Services Section. Archaeological Reconnaissance Survey of the Greer Tract, Hillsborough County, Florida. ($3,237). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2010). Hillsborough County Parks, Recreation and Conservation Department, Conservation Services Section. Archaeological Reconnaissance Survey of the Bower Tract, Hillsborough County, Florida. ($7,946). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2008). New Researcher Grant Program, Office of Research, University of South Florida. Archaeological Investigations of Domestic Contexts at the Crystal River Site, Citrus County, Florida. ($9977)

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THOMAS J. PLUCKHAHN, PAGE 3

GRANTS AND CONTRACTS (CONTINUED) Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2007). Humanities Institute, University of South Florida. Household Level Change in the Middle to Late Woodland Transition: The View from Kolomoki. ($5000). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2007). Faculty Research and Development Grant, University of South Florida. Analysis of Ceramic Vessels from the Archeological Site of Kolomoki. ($928.26) Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2005). Explorer Grant, National Geographic Society. Examining Household Level Change in the Middle to Late Woodland Transition: The View from Kolomoki ($12,750). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2005). Faculty Research Grant, University of Oklahoma. Archaeological Research in Spiro’s Hinterland ($6000). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2005). Oklahoma Humanities Council, with matching funds from the University of Oklahoma College of Arts and Sciences and Vice President for Research. Archaeological Research in Spiro’s Hinterland ($3000). Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Principal Investigator (2001). Georgia Museum of Natural History, Joshua Laerm Award for Research ($500). Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1996). Legacy Grant, Department of Defense. Survey, Testing and Damage Assessment of the Lewis Mound and Village Site (9BN39), Fort Stewart Military Reservation ($40,000). AWARDS AND HONORS 2019 Faculty Outstanding Research Award, Research and Innovation, University of South

Florida. 2015 Faculty Mentor Award, Graduate Student Organization, Department of Anthropology,

University of South Florida 2004 C.B. Moore Award from the Lower Mississippi Survey, Peabody Museum, and the

Southeastern Archaeological Conference, for “Outstanding Young Archaeologist in the field of Southeastern Archaeology.”

1999 Honorable Mention, Student Paper Competition, Southeastern Archaeological

Conference. 1984-88 Alumni Scholarship, University of Georgia.

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THOMAS J. PLUCKHAHN, PAGE 4

SERVICE TO THE UNIVERSITY AND PROFESSION 2018-present Member, Editorial Board, University Press of Florida 2016-present Vice-President, Florida Archaeological Council 2015-present Member, Editorial Board for the book series “Archaeology of the American South: New

Directions and Perspectives,” University of Alabama Press 2015-present Member, Little Salt Springs Advisory Board 2014-present Member, Editorial Advisory Board, Southeastern Archaeological Conference 2011-2014 Editor, Southeastern Archaeology 2011-2013 Chair, Undergraduate Council, University of South Florida 2010-present Board Member, Florida Archaeological Council 2010-2011 Member, Undergraduate Council, University of South Florida 2013-2014 Member, Public Education Committee, Society for American Archaeology 2007-2011 Editor, Early Georgia 2007-2009 Executive Officer I, Southeastern Archaeological Conference 2008-present Board Member, Alliance for Weedon Island Archaeological Research and Education COURSES TAUGHT Public Archaeology (grad) University of South Florida 2006-present Cultural Resource Management (grad) University of South Florida 2013 Cultural Resource Management (Undergrad) University of South Florida 2017-present Foundations of Applied Anthropology (grad) University of South Florida 2008-09, 2014-16 GIS for Anthropological Research (grad) University of South Florida 2007

University of Oklahoma 2005 Introduction to Archaeology University of South Florida 2006-present

University of Oklahoma 2003-2004 Introduction to Archaeology (online) University of South Florida 2015-present Field Methods in Archaeology University of South Florida 2008-present

University of Oklahoma 2006 University of Georgia 1998, 2000-2001

Laboratory Methods in Archaeology University of South Florida 2009-present University of Oklahoma 2005

Museum Internship University of Oklahoma 2006 University of Georgia 1998, 2000-2001 Archaeological Theory (grad) University of South Florida 2010

University of Oklahoma 2005 Anthropology Capstone University of Oklahoma 2005-2006 Archaeology of the Southeastern U.S. University of Oklahoma 2004 North American Archaeology University of South Florida 2007-present Household Archaeology (grad) University of Oklahoma 2004 Great Discoveries in Archaeology University of Oklahoma 2003-2006 Introduction to Anthropology, Honors University of Georgia 2001-2002

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THOMAS J. PLUCKHAHN, PAGE 5

BOOKS AND MONOGRAPHS Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Victor D. Thompson (2018). New Histories of Village Life at Crystal River. University Press of Florida, Gainesville. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2010). Archaeological Investigations in Spiro’s Hinterlands: Testing of the Lee Creek Ceremonial Site (34SQ12), Sequoyah County, Oklahoma. Memoirs of the Oklahoma Anthropological Society, Cross Timber Press, Norman, Oklahoma. Kowalewski, Stephen A., Andrew K. Balkansky, Laura R. Stiver Walsh, Thomas J. Pluckhahn, John F. Chamblee, Verónica Pérez Rodríguez, Verenice Y. Heredia Espinoza, and Charlotte A. Smith (2009). Origins of the Ñuu: Archaeology in the Mixteca Alta, Mexico. University Press of Colorado, Boulder. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Robbie F. Ethridge (editors) (2006). Light on the Path: The Anthropology and History of the Southeastern Indians. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2003). Kolomoki: Settlement, Ceremony, and Status in the Deep South, ca. 350 to 750 A.D. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2002). Kolomoki: Settlement, Ceremony, and Status in the Deep South, ca. 350 to 750 A.D. Ph.D. Dissertation, Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1994). The Evolution of Settlement and Land Use in Jackson and Madison Counties, Georgia. 1994. M.A. Thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia. BOOK CHAPTERS Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Neill J. Wallis, and Victor D. Thompson. From Small Histories to Big History on the Woodland-Period Gulf Coast. In “The Historical Turn in the Archaeology of the Southeastern United States,” edited by Eric Bowne and Robbie Ethridge. University of Florida Press, in press. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2019). Making the Atlantic Coast a Smaller Place and a Stepping Stone to Larger Issues. In “Human-Environmental Dynamics on the Atlantic Coast of North America,” edited by Leslie A. Reeder-Myers, John C. Turck, and Torben C. Rick, pp. 260-278. University of Florida Press, Gainesville. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2019). The Challenges of Curriculum Change and the Pedagogy of Public Archaeology and CRM at the University of South Florida. In Archaeologists and the Pedagogies of Heritage, Volume 2: Teaching and Practice, edited by Susan J. Bender and Phyllis Mauch Messenger, pp. 72-93. University of Florida Press, Gainesville. Thompson, Victor D., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2018). Oysters and Mound-Islands of Crystal River along the Central Gulf Coast of Florida. In Multispecies Archaeology, edited by Suzanne Pilaar Birch, pp.154-169. Routledge, New York. West, Shaun, Thomas Pluckhahn, and Martin Menz. Kolomoki (9ER1) and the Power of the Hypertrophic Village (2018). In The Archaeology of Villages in Eastern North America, edited by Jennifer Birch and Victor D. Thompson, pp. 54-72. University of Florida Press, Gainesville.

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BOOK CHAPTERS (CONTINUED) Wallis, Neill J., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2018). The Gift That Keeps on Giving: Culinary and Social Requirements of Middle and Late Woodland Swift Creek Pottery. In Baking, Bourbon, and Black Drink: Foodways Archaeology in the Southeastern United States, edited by Tanya M. Peres and Aaron Deter-Wolf, pp. 140-159. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa. Thompson, Victor D., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2018). Pipes, Cups, Platform Mounds, and Mortuary Ritual in the Lake Okeechobee Basin of South Florida. In Ancient Psychoactive Substances, edited by Scott M. Fitzpatrick, pp. 128-148. University of Florida Press, Gainesville. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Martin Menz, and Lori O’Neal (2018). Crafting Everyday Matters in the Middle Woodland. In Investigating the Ordinary: Everyday Matters in Southeast Archaeology, edited by Sarah E. Price and Phillip J. Carr, pp. 112-123. University of Florida Press, Gainesville. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2015). Households Making History: An Eventful Temporality of the Late Woodland Period at Kolomoki (9ER1). In The Enigma of the Event: Moments of Consequence in the Ancient Southeast edited by Zackary I. Gilmore and Jason M. O'Donoughue, pp 93-118. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Victor D. Thompson (2014). Monumentality beyond Scale: The Elaboration of Mounded Architecture at Crystal River. In New Histories of Precolumbian Florida, edited by Neill Wallis and Asa Randall, pp. 62-73. University of Florida Press, Gainesville. Thompson, Victor D., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2014). The Modification and Manipulation of Landscape at Fort Center. In New Histories of Pre-Columbian Florida, edited by Neill Wallis and Asa Randall, pp. 163-182. University Press of Florida, Gainesville. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2013). Cooperation and Competition among Late Woodland Households at Kolomoki, Georgia. In Cooperation and Collective Action: Archaeological Perspectives, edited by David M. Carballo, pp. 175-196. University Press of Colorado, Boulder. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Victor D. Thompson (2013). Constituting Similarity and Difference in the Deep South: The Ritual and Domestic Landscapes of Kolomoki, Crystal River, and Fort Center. In Landscapes and People of the Early and Middle Woodland Southeast, edited by Alice Wright and Edward Henry, pp. 181-195. University Press of Florida, Gainesville. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2010). Practicing Complexity (Past and Present) at Kolomoki. In Ancient Complexities: New Perspectives in Precolumbian North America, edited by Susan M. Alt, pp. 52-72. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2010). The Sacred and the Secular Revisited: The Essential Tensions of Early Village Societies in the Southeastern U.S. In Becoming Villagers: Comparing Early Village Societies, edited by Matthew Bandy and Jake Fox, pp. 100-118. University of Arizona Press, Tucson. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2009). Plazas y Mercados en la Mixteca Alta Prehispánica. In Bases de la Complejidad Social en Oaxaca: Memoria de la Cuarta Mesa Redonda de Monte Albán, edited by Nelly M. Robles García, pp. 277-294. Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, México, D.F.

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BOOK CHAPTERS (CONTINUED) Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2009). Kolomoki Mounds State Historic Park, Southwestern Georgia: A Large Woodland Period Village and Earthen Mound Complex. In Archaeology in America: An Encyclopedia, Volume 1: Northeast and Southeast, edited by Francis P. McManamon, pp. 294-296. Greenwood Press, Westport, Connecticut. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2008). Kolomoki Mounds State Historic Park, Ga. In American Indian Places: A Historical Guidebook, edited by Frances H. Kennedy, pp. 86. Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Robbie F. Ethridge, Jerald T. Milanich, and Marvin T. Smith (2006). Introduction. In Light on the Path: The Anthropology and History of the Southeastern Indians, edited by T.J. Pluckhahn and R.F. Ethridge. University of Alabama Press, Tuscaloosa. PEER-REVIEWED ARTICLES Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Neill J. Wallis, and Victor D. Thompson (2020). The History and Future of Migrationist Explanation in the Archaeology of the Eastern Woodlands: A Review and Case Study of the Woodland-Period Gulf Coast. Journal of Archaeological Research, in press. Jackson, Kendal, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2019). A First Millennium A.D. Vegetation History from the Crystal River Site (8CI1), Florida. The Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology, https://doi.org/10.1080/15564894.2018.1531958 Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Martin Menz, Shaun E. West, and Neill J. Wallis (2018). A New History of Community Formation and Change at Kolomoki (9ER1). American Antiquity 83:320-344. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Victor D. Thompson (2018). Woodland-Period Mound Building as Historical Tradition: Dating the Mounds and Monuments at Crystal River (8CI1). Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 15:73-94. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2018). Celebrating the Legacy of Mark Williams from the Oconee Valley to Far Beyond. Southeastern Archaeology 37:87-94. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Neill J. Wallis (2018). Swift Creek at a Human Scale. Southeastern Archaeology 37:129-137. Wood, M. Jared, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2018). Terra incognita: Terrestrial LiDAR Documentation of Mound A at Kolomoki (9ER1). Southeastern Archaeology 37:95-111. Lulewicz, Isabelle, Victor D. Thompson, Thomas J. Pluckhahn, Oindrila Das, and Fred T. Andrus (2017). Exploring Oyster (Crassostrea virginica) Habitat Collection via Oxygen Isotope Geochemistry and Its Implications for Ritual and Mound Construction at Crystal River and Roberts Island, Florida. Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology, https://doi.org/10.1080/15564894.2017.1363096 Victor D. Thompson, Thomas J. Pluckhahn, Matthew H. Colvin, Justin Cramb, Katharine G. Napora, Jacob Lulewicz, Brandon T. Ritchison (2017). Plummets, Public Ceremonies, and Interaction Networks during the Woodland Period in Florida. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 48:193-206.

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PEER-REVIEWED ARTICLES (CONTINUED) Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Neill J. Wallis (2017). Social Networks and Networked Scholars: Developing an Open-Access Database of Reconstructed Paddle Designs from Complicated-Stamped Pottery of the Woodland Period in the American Southeast. Advances in Archaeological Practice 5(2):159-169. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Rachel Thompson, and Kassie Kemp (2017). Constructing Community at Civic-Ceremonial Centers: Pottery-Making Practices at Crystal River and Roberts Island. Southeastern Archaeology 36(2):110-121. Wallis, Neill, Thomas Pluckhahn, and Michael D. Glascock (2016). Interaction Networks of the Woodland Period American Southeast: Neutron Activation Analysis of Swift Creek Complicated Stamped Pottery. American Antiquity 81(4):717-736. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Victor D. Thompson, and W. Jack Rink (2016). Evidence for Stepped Pyramids of Shell in the Woodland Period of Eastern North America. American Antiquity 81(2):345-363. Wallis, Neill J., Zackary I. Gilmore, Ann S. Cordell, Thomas J. Pluckhahn, Keith H. Ashley, and Michael D. Glascock (2015). The Ceramic Ecology of Florida: Compositional Baselines for Pottery Provenance Studies. Science and Technology of Archaeological Research 1(2):29-48. Thompson, Victor D., Thomas J. Pluckhahn, Oindrilla Das, and C. Fred T. Andrus (2015). Assessing Village Life and Monument Construction (cal. AD 65–1070) along the central Gulf Coast of Florida Through Stable Isotope Geochemistry. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 4:111–123. Pluckhahn, T.J., Hodson, A.D., Rink, W.J., Thompson, V.D., Hendricks, R.R., Doran, G., Farr, G., Cherkinsky, A., Norman, S.P. (2015). Radiocarbon and luminescence age determinations on mounds at Crystal River and Roberts Island, Florida, USA. Geoarchaeology: An International Journal 30(3):238-260. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Victor D Thompson, and Alexander Cherkinsky (2015). The Temporality of Shell-bearing Landscapes at Crystal River, Florida. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 37:19–36. Cherkinsky, Alexander, Thomas J Pluckhahn, and Victor D Thompson (2014). Variation in Radiocarbon Age Determinations from the Crystal River Archaeological Site, Florida. Radiocarbon 56(2):1–10. Thompson, Victor D., Kristen Gremillion, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2013). Hunter-gatherers of the Okeechobee Basin: Challenging Prehistoric Wetland Maize Agriculture at Fort Center, Florida. American Antiquity 78(1):181-196. Zarger, Rebecca K., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2013). Assessing Methodologies in Archaeological Ethnography: A Case for Incorporating Ethnographic Training in Graduate Archaeology Curricula. Public Archaeology 12(1):48–63. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Victor D. Thompson (2012). Integrating LiDAR and Conventional Mapping Data: Methodological Insights and Appraisal of Results from Mapping of the Fort Center site in South-Central Florida (8GL13). Journal of Field Archaeology 37(4):289-301. Thompson, Victor D., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2012). Monumentalization and Ritual Landscapes at Fort Center in the Lake Okeechobee Basin of South Florida. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 31(1):49-65.

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PEER-REVIEWED ARTICLES (CONTINUED) Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Ann S. Cordell (2011). Paste Characterization of Weeden Island Pottery from Kolomoki and Its Implications for Specialized Production. Southeastern Archaeology 30(2):288-310. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Sean P. Norman (2011). Typological, Functional, and Comparative Contextual Analyses of Woodland Hafted Bifaces from Kolomoki (9ER1). The Florida Anthropologist 64(3-4):207-240. Kowalewski, Stephen A., Luis Barba Pingarrón, Gabriela García Ayala, Benjamin A. Steere, Jorge Blancas Vázquez, Marisol Yadira Cortés Vilchis, Leonardo López Zárate, Agustín Ortiz Butrón, Thomas J. Pluckhahn y Blanca Vilchis Flores (2011). La Presencia Azteca En Oaxaca: La Provincia De Coixtlahuaca. Anales de Antropología 4:77-103. Thompson, Victor D., Philip J. Arnold, Thomas J. Pluckhahn, and Amber M. Vanderwarker (2011). Situating Remote Sensing in Anthropological Archaeology. Archaeological Prospection 18(3):195–213. Kowalewski, Stephen A., Benjamin A. Steere, Luis Barba Pigarrón, Jorge Blancas Vázquez, Augustín Butrón, Marisol Cortés Vilchis, Gabriela García Ayala, José Leonardo López Zárate, Blanca Vilchis Flores, Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2011). Dos Ciudades Prehispánicas en Coixtlahuaca, Oaxaca. Cuadernos del Sur 16(30):93-111. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2010). Household Archaeology in the Southeastern United States: History, Trends, and Challenges. Journal of Archaeological Research 18:331-385. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Victor D. Thompson, and Brent R. Weisman (2010). A New View of History and Process at Crystal River. Southeastern Archaeology 29(1):164-181. Thompson, Victor D., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2010). History, Complex Hunter-gatherers, and the Mounds and Monuments of Crystal River, Florida: A Geophysical Perspective. Journal of Island and Coastal Archaeology 5:33–51. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Victor D. Thompson (2009). Mapping Crystal River: Past, Present, and Future. The Florida Anthropologist 62(1-2):3-22. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2007). Reflections on Paddle Stamped Pottery: Symmetry Analysis of Swift Creek Paddle Designs from Kolomoki. Southeastern Archaeology 26(1):1-11. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2007). “The Mounds Themselves Might Be Perfectly Happy in Their Surroundings”: The “Kolomoki Problem” in Notes and Letters. The Florida Anthropologist 60(2-3):63-76. Carballo, David Manuel, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2007). Transportation Corridors and Political Evolution in Highland Mesoamerica: Settlement Analyses Incorporating GIS for Northern Tlaxcala, Mexico. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 26(4):607-629. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., J. Matthew Compton, and Mary Theresa Bonhage-Freund (2006). Archaeological Correlates of Small-Scale Feasting: Evidence from the Woodland Period Site of Kolomoki in Georgia. Journal of Field Archaeology 31(3):263-284. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and David A. McKivergan (2003). A Critical Appraisal of Middle Mississippian Settlement on the Georgia Coast. Southeastern Archeology 21(2):149-161.

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PEER-REVIEWED ARTICLES (CONTINUED) Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2000). Fifty Years Since Sears: Deconstructing the Domestic Sphere at Kolomoki. Southeastern Archaeology 19(2):145-155. Balkansky, Andrew K., Stephen A. Kowalewski, Verónica Pérez Rodríguez, Thomas J. Pluckhahn, Charlotte A. Smith, Laura R. Stiver, Dmitri Beliaev, John F. Chamblee, Verenice Y. Heredia Espinoza, Roberto Santos Pérez (2000). Archaeological Survey in the Mixteca Alta of Oaxaca, Mexico. Journal of Field Archaeology 27(4):365-389. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Chad O. Braley (1999). Connections Across the Southern Frontier: Spanish Artifacts from Creek Contexts at the Tarver Site (9JO6). The Florida Anthropologist 52(4):241-254. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1997). Beads, Pendants, and Buttons from the Tarver Sites. Beads 8-9:45-65. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1996). Joseph Caldwell's Summerour Mound (9FO16) and Late Woodland Platform Mounds in the Southeastern United States. Southeastern Archaeology 15(2):191-210. OTHER ARTICLES Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2011). Rethinking Mound D at Kolomoki. Early Georgia 39(1):85-98. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2010). “Gulfization” Revisitied: Household Change in the Late Woodland Period at Kolomoki (9ER1). Early Georgia 38(2):207-220. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2001). Woodland Prehistoric Period. In The New Georgia Encyclopedia, edited by John Inscoe. University of Georgia Press, Athens. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2001). Kolomoki Mounds Site. In The New Georgia Encyclopedia, edited by John Inscoe. University of Georgia Press, Athens. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1997). Rethinking Early Mississippian Chronology and Cultural Contact: The View from Tarver (9JO6). Early Georgia 25(1):21-54. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1995). The Lewis Mound (9BN39) and the Mississippian Settlement of Fort Stewart, Georgia. Early Georgia 23(1):77-92. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1994). Mississippian Settlement in the Upper Oconee and Upper Broad River Valleys. Early Georgia 22(1):1-34. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1992). Collecting Artifacts from the Surface. Early Georgia 20(1):18-21.

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BOOK REVIEWS Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2016). Review of Constructing Histories: Archaic Freshwater Shell Mounds and Social Landscapes of the St. Johns River, Florida, by Asa R. Randall. Antiquity 90:830-831. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2015). Review of Hunter-Gatherer Archaeology as Historical Process, edited by Kenneth E. Sassaman and Donald H. Holly, Jr. American Antiquity 80:789. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2009). Review of Households and Hegemony: Early Creek Prestige Goods, Symbolic Capital, and Social Power, by Cameron Wesson. The Journal of Southern History 76(1):121. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2008). Review of Looting Spiro Mounds: An American King Tut’s Tomb, by David La Vere. Western Historical Quarterly, Autumn 2008:378. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2007). Review of Geographical Information Systems in Archaeology, by James Conolly and Mark Lake, Cambridge Manuals in Archaeology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. American Anthropologist 109(2):370-371. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2007). Review of The Native World Beyond Apalachee: West Florida and the Chattahoochee River Valley, by John H. Hann. SAS Bulletin, Spring 2007. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2006). Review of Prehistoric Cultures of North America: The Woodland and Mississippian Traditions, an Online exhibition of the Logan Museum of Anthropology, Beloit College. Museum Anthropology 29(1):67-68. Pluckhhan, Thomas J. (2000). Review of The Etowah Papers, by Warren K. Moorehead. The Florida Anthropologist 54(1):59-60. PAPERS PRESENTED BEFORE LEARNED SOCIETIES Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Kendal Jackson (2019). Ramping it Up: Searching for Grammar in the Woodland and Mississippian Architecture of the Central Gulf Coast. Invited paper presented in the symposium “Spelling it Out: Deciphering the Architectural Grammar(s) of Precolumbian Florida Organizers,” organized by Nathan Lawres and Jon Endonino for the 76th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Jackson, MS. West, Shaun, Martin Menz, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2019). One Ring to Rule Them All: Spatial Patterning within the Circular Village at Kolomoki (9ER1). Invited paper presented in the symposium “Put a Ring on It: Archaic to Mississippian Southeastern Arcuate Communities,” organized by Analise M. Hollingshead and Haley S. Messer for the 76th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Jackson, MS. Thomas J. Pluckhahn, Victor D. Thompson, Isabelle H. Lulewicz, C. Trevor Duke, and J. Matthew Compton (2019). Selfish for Shellfish, or Magnanimous about Mollusks? The Transformation of Cooperation across the First Millennium CE at Crystal River and Roberts Island, Florida, USA. Invited paper presented in the symposium “Complex Fisher-Hunter-Gatherers Of North America,” organized by Christina Sampson for the 84th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Albuquerque, NM.

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PAPERS PRESENTED BEFORE LEARNED SOCIETIES (CONTINUED) Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Kendal Jackson, C. Trevor Duke (2018). In Small Organisms Forgotten: Micro-fauna from Shell Middens at Crystal River (8CI1) and Roberts Island (8CI41) as Potential Proxies for Paleo-Climate. Invited paper presented in the symposium Shell Middens: Formation, Function, Survey, and Endangered Cultural/Paleoenvironmental Heritage, organized by Alice R. Kelley and Jacquelynn Miller, for the 83rd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Washington, DC. Gatenbee, Amy, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2018). Making Theory Fun: Combining Archaeological Theory with Active Learning Exercises in Teaching North American Prehistory. Poster presented in the symposium “Archaeology and Active Learning: There’s No Need to Reinvent the Wheel,” organized by Philip Carr and Leah McCurdy, for the 83rd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Washington, DC. Cordell, Ann, Neill Wallis, and Thomas Pluckhahn (2018). Ceramic Petrography of Woodland Period Swift Creek Complicated Stamped Pottery in Florida and the Lower Southeastern United States. Poster presented in the symposium “Ceramic Petrographers in the Americas: Promoting the Advancement and Application of Petrography in Archaeology,” organized by Andrea Torvinen, for the 83rd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Washington, DC. Pluckhahn, Thomas (2018). The “Unique and the Foreign” in Ritual Emplacement: An Analysis of Whole Vessels from the Main Burial Complex at Crystal River (8CI1). Invited paper presented in the symposium “Practicing Pottery: Method and Theory in Southeastern Ceramic Analysis,” organized by Paul Thacker, for the 75th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Augusta, GA. Wallis, Neill J., Ann S. Cordell, and Thomas Pluckhahn (2018). Integrated Analyses of Swift Creek Complicated Stamped Pottery and the Challenges of Sourcing Research. Invited paper presented in the symposium “Practicing Pottery: Method and Theory in Southeastern Ceramic Analysis,” organized by Paul Thacker, for the 75th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Augusta, GA. Jackson, Kendal, Thomas Pluckhahn, and C. Trevor Duke (2018). Fisher Folk and Wetland Foragers: A Multi-Proxy Study of Coastal Wetland Plant Use at the Crystal River Site (8CI1), Florida. Paper presented at the 75th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Augusta, GA. Pluckhahn, Thomas (2018). “Rising Seas and Sinking Sites”: Planning for Archaeological Site Loss in Florida. Session organized for the 70th Annual Meeting of the Florida Anthropological Society, St. Petersburg, FL. Jackson, Kendal, Jeff Moates, Thomas J. Pluckhahn, and Kassie Kemp (2017). Re-Visiting Stanley Mound (8MA127): A Sand Burial Mound in the Manasota Hinterlands. Paper presented at 69th annual meeting of the Florida Anthropological Society, Jacksonville, FL. West, Shaun, Martin Menz, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2017). Kolomoki: A Village of Villages. Paper presented at 69th annual meeting of the Florida Anthropological Society, Jacksonville, FL. Rudolph, Savannah, Thomas J. Pluckhahn, and Lori O’Neal (2017). Getting to the (Bone) Point. Paper presented at 69th annual meeting of the Florida Anthropological Society, Jacksonville, FL.

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PAPERS PRESENTED BEFORE LEARNED SOCIETIES (CONTINUED) Pluckhahn, Thomas, and Neill Wallis (2017). Households and Hopewellian Interaction in the American Southeast. Paper presented in the symposium “Households and Social Evolution: Comprehensive Approaches to Social Transformation,” organized by Lacey Carpenter, Elsa Redmond, and Charles Spencer for the 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Vancouver. Thompson, Victor, Thomas Pluckhahn, Matt Colvin, Jacob Lulewicz and Brandon Ritchison (2017). Plummets, Ritual Dance, Individuals, and Macroregional Interactions during the Woodland Period in Florida. Paper presented in the symposium “Investigating Interaction from Tunacunnhee to Talaje: Papers in Honor of Richard W. Jefferies,” organized by Christopher Moore for the 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Vancouver. Lulewicz, Isabelle, Victor Thompson and Thomas Pluckhahn (2017). Shell Mound Architecture and Cooperative Mass Oyster Collection on the Central Gulf Coast of Florida, USA. Paper presented in the symposium “Archaeological Perspectives on the Evolution of Forager Cooperation,” organized by Randy Haas for the 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Vancouver. Cordell, Ann, Neill Wallis, and Thomas Pluckhahn (2016). Ceramic Petrography and Woodland Period Social Interactions in Florida and the Southeastern United States. Paper presented at the 73rd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Athens, GA. West, Shaun, Thomas Pluckhahn, and Martin Menz (2016). Size Matters: Kolomoki (9ER1) and the Power of the Hypertrophic Village. Paper presented in the symposium “The Power of Villages,” organized by Jennifer Birch and Victor D. Thompson for the 73rd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Athens, GA. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Neill J. Wallis (2016). Introduction to a Marksist Archaeology: Swift Creek at a Human Scale. Paper presented in the symposium “A Marksist Archaeology: Celebrating the Legacy of Mark Williams from the Oconee Valley to Far Beyond,” organized by Thomas J. Pluckhahn for the 73rd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Athens, GA. Wood, M. Jared, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2016). Terra incognita. Paper presented in the symposium “A Marksist Archaeology: Celebrating the Legacy of Mark Williams from the Oconee Valley to Far Beyond,” organized by Thomas J. Pluckhahn for the 73rd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Athens, GA. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Neill Wallis (2016). Reading Between the Lines: A Contextual Approach to Social Interactions in the Woodland Period of the American Southeast through Integrated Analyses of Complicated Stamped Pottery. Paper presented in the symposium “Chaco and Hopewell: Rethinking Interaction through Multiscalar Network Analysis,” organized by Barbara Mills and Alice Wright for the 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Orlando, FL. Jackson, Kendal, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2016). Preliminary Results from Pollen Analysis of Soil Cores at Crystal River (8CI1), Florida. Paper presented in the symposium “Understanding the Nature and Timing of Human Responses to Environmental Change,” organized by Jon Lohse and Myles Miller for the 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Orlando, FL.

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PAPERS PRESENTED BEFORE LEARNED SOCIETIES (CONTINUED) Isabelle Lulewicz, Victor Thompson, Thomas Pluckhahn, Oindrilla Das, and Fred Andrus (2016). From Habitat Exploitation to Monument Construction: Exploring the Nature of Shell Deposits at Crystal River and Roberts Island through Stable Isotope Geochemistry. Paper presented in the symposium “Terraforming and Monumentality in Hunter-Gatherer-Fisher Landscapes,” organized by Colin Grier and Margo Schwadron for the 81st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Orlando, FL. Thompson, Rachel E., Thomas J. Pluckhahn, and Kassie C. Kemp (2015). Persistent Communities of Practice at Crystal River. Paper presented in the symposium “Southeastern Pottery: Identity and Society,” organized by Victoria Dekle, Matthew Sanger, and Rachel Hensler for the 72nd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Nashville, TN. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Martin W. Menz, and Lori O’Neal (2015). Crafting Everyday Matters in the Middle Woodland. Paper presented in the symposium “The Archaeology of Everyday Matters,” organized by Sarah E. Price and Phillip J. Carr for the 72nd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Nashville, TN. Compton, J. Matthew, Thomas J. Pluckhahn, and Victor D. Thompson (2015). A Regional Perspective on Late Woodland Animal Use at the Roberts Island Shell Mound Complex. Paper presented at the 72nd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Nashville, TN. Lulewicz, Isabelle, Victor Thompson, Thomas Pluckhahn, Oindrilla Das, and Fred Andrus (2015). Exploring Oyster (Crassostrea virginica) Habitat Collection via Oxygen Isotope Sckerochronology at Crystal River and Roberts Island, Florida. Paper presented at the 72nd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Nashville, TN. Cordell, Ann S., Neill J. Wallis, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2015). Ceramic Petrography and Woodland Period Social Interactions in Florida and the Southeastern United States. Paper presented at the 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Francisco, CA. Wallis, Neill J., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2015). Integrated Analyses of Complicated Stamped Pottery in the American Southeast. Paper presented in the symposium "Migration and Mobility in the New World" organized by Jessica H. Stone and Adrianne M. Offenbecker for the 80th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Francisco, CA. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Victor D. Thompson (2014). Production, Exchange, and Complexity at Crystal River. Invited paper presented in the symposium "Rise and Resistance: Complex Polities among Islands and Coasts" organized by Scott Fitzpatrick and Victor D. Thompson for the 79th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Austin, TX. Wallis, Neill J., Zackary Gilmore, Ann S. Cordell, Keith H. Ashley, Thomas J. Pluckhahn, and Michael D. Glascock (2014). Clay Chemistry and Mineralogy in Florida and Georgia: Implications for Pottery Provenience. Poster presented at the International Symposium on Archaeometry, Los Angeles, CA. Wallis, Neill J., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2015). Assessing Mobility and Social Interactions through Wallis, Neill J., Thomas J. Pluckhahn, Ann S. Cordell, and Michael D. Glascock (2014). Understanding Woodland Period Social Interactions Through Integrated Analyses of Pottery. Poster presented at the 79th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Austin, TX.

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PAPERS PRESENTED BEFORE LEARNED SOCIETIES (CONTINUED) Duke, C. Trevor, Thomas J. Pluckhahn, Victor D. Thompson, and Lori O'Neal (2014). Temporal Trends in Invertebrate Faunal Remains from Crystal River (8CI1) and Robert's Island (8CI41). Paper presented at the 71st Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Greenville, SC. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Victor D. Thompson, and J. Matthew Compton. Archaeological Investigations at the Roberts Island Shell Mound Complex: Late Woodland Settlement and Ceremony on Florida's West Central Gulf Coast. Paper presented at the 71st Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Greenville, SC. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Victor D. Thompson, and Alexander Cherkinsky (2013). Deconstructing the "Midden" at Crystal River. Paper presented in the session “Subsistence, Settlement, History, and Identity: Current Approaches to the Investigation of Shell Mounds, Middens, and Rings in the Southeastern United States,” organized by Thaddeus Bissett and Stephen Carmody for the 70th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Tampa, FL. Thompson, Victor D., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2013). Engineering Islands and Island Engineers: The Social and Technological Implications of Anthropogenic Landforms along Crystal River. Invited paper presented at the 78th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Honolulu, HI. Thompson, Victor D., Thomas J. Pluckhahn, W. Jack Rink, Glen Doran, Christina Perry Sampson, Alex Hodson, and Sean Norman (2013). Exploring Middle Woodland Period Architectural Engineering through Shallow Geophysics and Coring at Crystal River, Florida. Poster presented at the 70th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Tampa, FL. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Victor D. Thompson, Jack D. Rink, and Brent R. Weisman (2012). Stepped Pyramidal Mounds of the Woodland Period in the Southeastern United States. Paper presented at the Meeting of the Society of American Archaeology, Memphis, TN. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Victor D. Thompson (2012). The Crystal River Early Village Archaeological Project (CREVAP): An Introduction and Progress Report. Paper presented in the symposium “New Light on an Old Enigma: Recent Research at Crystal River (8CI1) and Its Contemporaries” organized by Thomas J. Pluckhahn, at the 69th Annual Meeting of the Southeast Archaeological Conference, Baton Rouge, LA. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Sarah K. Gilleland (2012). Looking for the Floor at Roberts Island. Paper presented in the symposium “New Light on an Old Enigma: Recent Research at Crystal River (8CI1) and Its Contemporaries” organized by Thomas J. Pluckhahn, at the 69th Annual Meeting of the Southeast Archaeological Conference, Baton Rouge, LA. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2011). Households Making History: Linking the Bounding Events of the Late Woodland Period. Invited paper presented in the symposium “The Enigma of the Event: Moments of Consequence in the Ancient Southeast,” organized by Zackary I. Gilmore and Jason O’Donoghue, at the 68th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Jacksonville, FL. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Victor D. Thompson (2011). Monumentality Beyond Scale: The Elaboration of Mounded Architecture at Crystal River (8CI1). Invited paper presented in the symposium “Precolumbian Archaeology in Florida: New Approaches to the Appendicular Southeast,” organized by Neill Wallis and Asa Randall, at the 68th Annual Meeting of the Southeast Archaeological Conference, Jacksonville, FL.

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PAPERS PRESENTED BEFORE LEARNED SOCIETIES (CONTINUED) Harke, Ryan, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2011). Publication Trends in Southeastern Archaeology, 1982-2010. Paper presented at the 68th Annual Meeting of the Southeast Archaeological Conference, Jacksonville, FL. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Victor D. Thompson (2010). Constituting Similarity and Difference in the Deep South: The Ritual and Domestic Landscapes of Kolomoki, Crystal River, and Fort Center. Paper presented at the 67th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Lexington, KY. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Sean P. Norman (2010). What's the Point? Standardizing Middle and Late Woodland Projectile Point Identification (with an Example from Kolomoki). Paper presented at the meetings of the Florida Anthropological Society, Fort Myers, FL. Cordell, Ann, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2010). Paste Characterization of Weeden Island Pottery from Kolomoki, Georgia. Paper presented at the 75th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, St. Louis, MO. Cordell, Ann, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2010). Paste Characterization of Weeden Island Pottery from Kolomoki. Paper presented at the 68th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Lexington, KY. Thompson, Victor D., Phillip J. Arnold, III, Thomas J. Pluckhahn, and Amber M. Vanderwarker (2010). Situating Remote Sensing in Anthropological Archaeology. Invited paper presented in symposium "Anthropological Geophysics: Scale and Configuration in the Archaeological Record," organized by James Enloe and Jason Thompson, at the 75th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, St. Louis, MO. Thompson, Victor D., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2010). Monumentalization and Ritual Landscapes: An Example from Fort Center in the Lake Okeechobee Basin of South Florida. Paper presented at the 67th Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Lexington, KY. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2009). Gulfization Revisited: Household Change in the Late Woodland Period at Kolomoki (9ER1). Invited paper presented in the symposium “Not Your Average Joe: Caldwell’s Contributions to Archaeology,” organized by Pamela Baughman, at the 66th Annual Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Mobile, AL. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2009). Competition and Cooperation Among Late Woodland Households at Kolomoki (9ER1). Invited paper presented in the symposium “Evolutionary Dynamics of Cooperation,” organized by David Carballo, at the 74nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Atlanta, GA. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Victor D. Thompson (2009). Recent Research at Crystal River (8CI1). Paper presented at the meetings of the Florida Anthropological Society, Pensacola, FL. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2008). Rethinking Weeden Island: A Role-Centered Approach to Understanding the Middle Woodland Societies of the Gulf Coast. Invited paper presented in the lecture series “Current Archaeological Research in the Southeastern United States,” presented at the Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.

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PAPERS PRESENTED BEFORE LEARNED SOCIETIES (CONTINUED) Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and John Meyers (2008). Investigation of a Late Woodland Domestic Area at Kolomoki (9ER1). Paper presented at the meetings of the Florida Anthropological Society, Tampa, FL. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Richard Estabrook (2008). All Politics Is Local—or Is It? Integrating Local and Regional Social Processes in the Interpretation of Weeden Island Complexity. Invited paper presented in the session “The Emergence of Hunter-Gatherer Complexity in South Florida” at the 73rd Annual Meeting of Society for American Archaeology, Vancouver, BC. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Eric Jones (2008). The Application of Social Network Analysis to Archaeological Datasets: An Appraisal of Hopewellian Interaction Networks on the Gulf Coast. Paper presented in the session “Social Network Analysis and Anthropology,” organized by Arthur Murphy, at the Meetings of the Society for Anthropological Science, New Orleans, LA. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Eric Jones (2008). The Application of Social Network Analysis to Archaeological Datasets: An Appraisal of Hopewellian Interaction Networks on the Gulf Coast. Paper presented in the session “Social Network Analysis and Anthropology,” organized by Arthur Murphy, at the Annual Meeting of the American Anthropological Association, San Francisco, CA. Thompson, Victor D., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2008). The Crystal River Landscape: Shallow Geophysics at a Famous Florida Site. Paper presented at the 65th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Charlotte, NC. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2007). “Personalizing” Middle Woodland Exchange on the Gulf Coast. Invited paper presented in the symposium “Exchange and Sociality in Small Scale Societies,” organized by Jamie Waggoner and Neill Wallis, at the 64th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Knoxville, TN. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2007). The Use and Abuse of Ethnographic Analogy to Describe Complexity: A Case Study of Kolomoki and the Middle Woodland Period in the Deep South. Invited paper presented in the symposium “Considering Complexity: Confounding Categories with Practices” organized by Susan Alt, at the 72nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Austin, TX. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2006). The Sacred and the Secular Revisited: The Essential Tensions of Early Village Societies in the Southeastern U.S. Invited paper presented in the symposium “Early Village Societies in Global Perspective,” organized by Matthew Bandy and Jake Fox, for the 71st Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, San Juan, Puerto Rico. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2006). The Sacred and the Secular Revisited: The Essential Tensions of Early Village Societies in the Southeastern U.S. Invited paper presented in the Amerind Seminar “Early Village Societies in Comparative Perspective,” organized by Matthew Bandy and Jake Fox, Dragoon, AZ. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2006). Archaeological Investigations in Spiro’s Hinterland: Testing of the Lee Creek Ceremonial Site (34SQ12) Sequoyah County, Oklahoma. Paper presented at the 63rd Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Little Rock, AR. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Robert Brooks (2006). Viewing Caddoan Culture History through GIS: An Oklahoma Perspective. Paper presented at the Caddo Conference, Nacogdoches, TX.

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PAPERS PRESENTED BEFORE LEARNED SOCIETIES (CONTINUED) Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2005). Reflections on Paddle Stamped Pottery: Symmetry Analysis of Swift Creek Designs from Kolomoki (9ER1). Paper presented at the 62nd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Columbia, SC. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2005). Hopewellian Affiliations of Certain Sites in the Deep South. Paper presented at the “Hopewell Space/Time Continuum,” a workshop organized by Mark Seeman and Robert Mainfort. Boonshoft Museum of Discovery, Dayton, OH. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2004). Patterns in the Spacing and Alignment of Mounds at Kolomoki (9ER1). Paper presented at the 61st Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, St. Louis, MO. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2004). Plazas y Mercados en la Mixteca Alta Prehispanica. Invited paper presented at the symposium “Bases de la Complejidad Social en Oaxaca: Mesa Redonda de Monte Albán IV,” Oaxaca, Mexico. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2004). Round and Round: Kolomoki (9ER1) and the Circular Communities of the Middle Woodland Period in the American South. Invited paper presented in the symposium “Circular Communities in the Americas,” organized by Victor Thompson and Jose Iriarte, at the 69th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Montreal. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2003). Swift Creek Paddle Designs from Kolomoki (9ER1). Paper Presented at the 60th Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Charlotte, NC. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Stephen A. Kowalewski (2003). Plazas and Markets in the Prehispanic Mixteca Alta. Paper presented at the Meeting of the Society of American Archaeology, Milwaukee, WI. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Stephen A. Kowalewski (2002). Ceramics, Chronology, Community, and Complexity at Kolomoki. Paper presented at the meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Denver, CO. Compton, Matthew, and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2002). Interpretation of an Unusual Faunal Assemblage from Kolomoki (9ER1). Paper Presented at the 59th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Biloxi, MS. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2001). Charles Hudson and the Social History of the Southeastern United States. Introduction to the symposium “Charles Hudson and the Social History of the Southeastern United States”, organized by Robbie F. Ethridge and Thomas J. Pluckhahn for the 58th Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Chattanooga, TN. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (2001). It’s Not the Size, It’s How You Use It: Space Syntax Analysis of Civic-Ceremonial Architecture from Pre-hispanic Oaxaca, Mexico. Paper presented at the 66th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, New Orleans, LA. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., Stephen A. Kowalewski, Nina Serman, Mathew Compton, and Verónica Pérez Rodríguez (2001). Community and Household at Kolomoki (9ER1). Paper presented at the 58th Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Chattanooga, TN.

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PAPERS PRESENTED BEFORE LEARNED SOCIETIES (CONTINUED) Braley, Chad O., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (2000). Recent Advances in the Archeology of the Historic Creek Indians of Georgia. Paper Presented at the 57th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Macon, GA. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1999). Fifty Years Since Sears: Deconstructing Kolomoki. Paper presented at the 56th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archeological Conference, Pensacola, FL. McKivergan, David A., and Thomas J. Pluckhahn (1999). A Critical Appraisal of Middle Mississippian Settlement on the Georgia Coast. Paper presented at the 56th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archeological Conference, Pensacola, FL. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1998). Kolomoki Revisited: the 1998 Field Season. Paper presented at the Fall meeting of the Society for Georgia Archaeology, Valdosta, GA. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1997). Highway 61 Revisited: Archaeological Testing of the Leake Mound (9BR2) and Related Middle Woodland Components in Bartow County, Georgia. Paper presented at the 54th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archeological Conference, Baton Rouge, LA. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Chad O. Braley (1997). Recent Excavations at the Tarver (9JO6) and Little Tarver (9JO198) Sites, Macon, Georgia. Paper presented at the Meetings of the Society for American Archaeology, Nashville, TN. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1996). The Lewis Mound and Village Site (9BN39) and the Mississippian Settlement of the Georgia Coastal Zone. Paper presented at the 53rd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archeological Conference, Birmingham, AL. Pluckhahn, Thomas J., and Chad O. Braley (1996). Recent Excavations at the Tarver (9JO6) and Little Tarver (9JO198) Sites, Macon, Georgia. Paper presented at the 53rd Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archeological Conference, Birmingham, AL. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1994). Forty Years Later and Forty Meters Underwater: Joe Caldwell's Summerour Mound (9FO16). Paper presented at the 51st Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archeological Conference, Lexington, KY. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1993). Mississippian Settlement in the Headwaters of the Oconee: From Woodstock to Wolfskin with Nothing In Between. Paper presented at the 50th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Raleigh, NC. Pluckhahn, Thomas J. (1992). Mississippian Period Buffer Zones in the Southeastern United States. Paper presented at the 49th Annual Meeting of the Southeastern Archaeological Conference, Little Rock, AR. PUBLIC LECTURES AND EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES “Remembering Tocobaga: Recent Archaeology at the Safety Harbor Site.” Public lecture presented at Preservation Summit #8, Safety Harbor Public Library, Safety Harbor, Florida, June 18, 2019. “Remembering Tocobaga: Recent Archaeology at the Safety Harbor Site.” Public lecture presented at the Safety Harbor Museum, May 22, 2019.

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PUBLIC LECTURES AND EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES (CONTINUED) “Across the Divide: The Archaeology of the Roberts Island Complex.” Public lecture and tour presented in association with the meeting of the Florida Anthropological Society, Crystal River, Florida, May 12, 2019. “A History of Crystal River in Three Artifacts.” Public lecture presented at Burke’s Irish Pub, Crystal River, Florida, February 23, 2019. “New Histories of Village Life at Crystal River.” Public lecture presented at the Weedon Island Museum and Cultural Center, St. Petersburg Florida, September 20, 2018. “Crystal River: A First Millennium Cosmopolitan Community on Florida's Gulf Coast.” Public lecture presented at the meetings of the Florida Trust for Historic Preservation, Tampa, Florida, 2014. “Crystal River: A First Millennium Cosmopolitan Community on Florida's Gulf Coast.” Public lecture presented in the series “In the Dirt” at the Florida Historical Society, Cocoa, Florida, 2013. “Competition and Cooperation at Crystal River.” Public lecture at Crystal River State Archaeological Park, Crystal River, Florida, 2012. “Competition and Cooperation at Crystal River.” Public lecture in the series “See the Unseen through Florida Archaeology” for the Florida Public Archaeology Network and the Tampa History Center. 2011. “Competition and Cooperation at Crystal River.” Public lecture presented at Weedon Island Preserve, St. Petersburg, Florida, 2010. Consultant for new video for Kolomoki Mounds State Historic Park, 2007-2008. “Seeing the Forest for the Trees: Weeden Island in Regional Perspective.” Public lecture presented at the “Rethinking Weeden Island Conference,” organized by Brent Weisman and Phyllis Kollianos, Weedon Island Preserve, St. Petersburg, Florida, 2007. Tour of Kolomoki Mounds State Historic Park. For the Tallahassee Chapter of the Florida Anthropological Society, 2007. Artifact Identification, Kolomoki Fall Festival, Kolomoki Mounds State Historic Park, Blakely, Georgia, 2007. “Recent Archaeological Research in Spiro’s Hinterlands.” Public lecture for the February meeting of the Central Oklahoma Chapter of the Oklahoma Anthropological Society, 2006. “Recent Archaeological Research in Spiro’s Hinterlands.” Paper presented at the November meeting of the Ark-Homa Chapter of the Arkansas Archeological Society and Oklahoma Anthropological Society, 2005. “A Brief History of the Kolomoki Mounds.” Presentation for the Rotary Club of Albany, Georgia, 2003. “Recent Archaeological Investigations at Kolomoki.” Public lecture presented at the Spring meeting of the Society for Georgia Archaeology, Fort Gaines, Georgia, 2002. Public archaeology Days. Kolomoki Mounds State Historic Park, Blakely, Georgia, 2001.

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PUBLIC LECTURES AND EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES (CONTINUED) Artifact Identification, Kolomoki Fall Festival, Kolomoki Mounds State Historic Park, Blakely, Georgia, 2001. “Archaeology of the Tarver Sites.” Public lecture for the Northwest Georgia Chapter of the Society for Georgia Archaeology, Cartersville, Georgia., 1997 “Archaeology of the Tarver Sites.” Public lecture for the Greater Atlanta Chapter of the Society for Georgia Archaeology, Atlanta, 1997. The Lewis Mound and Village Site and the Archaeology of Fort Stewart Military Reservation. Popular report prepared by the LAMAR Institute for the United States Department of Defense Legacy Resource Management Program, 1996. TECHNICAL REPORTS AND MANUSCRIPTS Primary author or co-author on more than 100 technical reports summarizing archaeological investigations in the Southeast U.S.