Chapman, Jefferson
np55Candy Creek-Connestee components in eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina and their relationship with Adena-Hopewell
Candy Creek-Connestee components in eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina and their relationship with Adena-Hopewellessay 1979
nn45Appendix
Appendixbook chapter 1977
nn45The Rose Island site and the bifurcate point tradition
The Rose Island site and the bifurcate point traditionBook 1975
nn45The Bacon Farm site and a buried site reconnaissance
The Bacon Farm site and a buried site reconnaissanceBook 1978
nn45Archaic period research in the lower Little Tennessee River Valley, 1975
Archaic period research in the lower Little Tennessee River Valley, 1975book chapter 1977
- Summary
- Jefferson Chapman is an archaeologist who conducted extensive excavations at sites in eastern Tennessee, recovering evidence that provided the first secure radiocarbon chronology for Early and Middle Archaic period assemblages in Eastern North America. He also is a research professor in anthropology and the Director of the Frank H. McClung Museum at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Chapman’s professional interests include Southeastern archaeology, paleoethnobotany, museology and public archaeology. Wikipedia
- Gender or Sex
- Male [1][2][4]
- Born
- 1943 [2][4]
- Birth Place
- Kinston, NC [2]
- Country
- United States [2]
- Language
- English [3]
- Occupation
- anthropologist [4]
- archaeologist [4]
- Sources
- 1. VIAF
- 2. Deutsche Nationalbibliothek (Germany)
- 3. Bibliothèque nationale de France
- 4. Wikidata
autorenewLast updated Jun 14, 2025