Name/Title
Faunal RemainsEntry/Object ID
2001.15.2655Description
23BN1
Henning
Sq EE
7/1/66
Level 5
24"-30"
Bone
Cagle, Page, Baker
Worked bone fragments, some charred
Originally stored in a box labeled "bone and shell, sorted bone"
Includes a bag labeled "ident fauna" (pelvis, teeth, deer distal phalanx)Collection
23BN1Ethnography
Culture/Tribe
Kaw Nation
Native American
Notes
See "Weblinks" for more information on Kaw NationLexicon
Search Terms
Archaeological, 23BN1, King Hill, DentitionProvenance
Notes
The King Hill Site (23BN1) is located in a residential area of the city of St. Joseph, Missouri. The archaeological site is situated on top of a high, west facing bluff overlooking the Missouri River Valley. It was excavated by members of the St. Joseph Chapter of the Missouri Archaeological Society and the Summer Field School of the University of Missouri - Columbia over a 10 day period in the summer of 1966 under a cooperative agreement with the St. Joseph Museum. Work was continued in the fall of that year and into the next by the St. Joseph Chapter. Additional work was conducted at the site by the University of Nebraska.
Pottery and limited trade goods in the upper levels indicate a late Oneota, early historic occupation, possibly by the Kansa tribe, about AD 1700. The site was placed on the National Register of Historic Sites in 1968 and a preliminary report was issued that same year. In 1972 further excavations, funded by the National Science Foundation, were undertaken by the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. The Missouri Field School and the University of Nebraska excavations were directed by Dr. Dale R. Henning" (Cutler and Blake 1982).
Information gathered from: http://users.stlcc.edu/mfuller/kinghill.html