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  2. Antelope Creek phase - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antelope_Creek_phase

    The Antelope Creek phase was an American Indian culture in the Texas panhandle and adjacent Oklahoma dating from AD 1200 to 1450. [1] The two most important areas where the Antelope Creek people lived were in the Canadian River valley centered on present-day Lake Meredith near the city of Borger, Texas, and the Buried City complex in Wolf Creek valley near the town of Perryton, Texas.

  3. Buttermilk Creek complex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buttermilk_Creek_Complex

    The Buttermilk Creek complex is the remains of a paleolithic settlement along the shores of Buttermilk Creek in present-day Salado, Texas. The assemblage dates to ~13.2 to 15.5 thousand years old. [1] If confirmed, the site represents evidence of human settlement in the Americas that pre-dates the Clovis culture. [2]

  4. Ancestral Puebloan dwellings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancestral_Puebloan_dwellings

    Great houses – Generally built on flat plains throughout the Southwest, the great house-style Pueblo dwelling sat independent of cliffs. Pit houses – Most of the populations of the Southwest lived in pit houses, carefully dug rectangular or circular depressions in the earth with wattle and daub adobe walls supported by log sized corner posts.

  5. Fourche Maline culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourche_Maline_culture

    Map of the Fourche Maline, Mill Creek, Marksville, and Mossy Grove cultures. The Fourche Maline culture (pronounced foosh-ma-lean) [a] was a Woodland Period Native American culture that existed from 300 BCE to 800 CE, [2] in what are now defined as southeastern Oklahoma, southwestern Arkansas, northwestern Louisiana, and northeastern Texas.

  6. Bidai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bidai

    Some settled on the Brazos Indian Reservation in present-day Young County, Texas, and were removed with the Caddo to Indian Territory. [6] [2] The remaining Bidai formed one village about 12 miles from Montgomery, Texas, [1] growing corn and picking cotton for hire in the mid-19th century.

  7. Springs of Travis County, Texas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Springs_of_Travis_County,_Texas

    J.W. Wilbarger tells the story of Indians stopping at the springs in his book Indian Depredations in Texas. [ 6 ] : 139 In 1842, a Mrs. Simpson living on West Pecan Street, about three blocks west of Congress, in Austin had two children – a daughter 14, and a son 12 — abducted by Indians while the children were in the adjacent Shoal Creek ...

  8. Native American tribes in Texas - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Native_American_tribes_in_Texas

    Texas Senate Bill 274 to formally recognize the Lipan Apache Tribe of Texas, introduced in January 2021, died in committee, [13] as did Texas Senate Bill 231 introduced in November 2022. [14] Texas Senate Bill 1479, introduced in March 2023, and Texas House Bill 2005, introduced in February 2023, both to state-recognize the Tap Pilam ...

  9. Akokisa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akokisa

    Atakapans and neighboring groups. In R. D. Fogelson (Ed.), Handbook of North American Indians: Southeast (Vol. 14, pp. 659–663). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution. Sibley, John. (1806). Historical sketches of the several Indian tribes in Louisiana, south of the Arkansas River, and between the Mississippi and River Grand [5 April 1805].