Artwork by Hatty Ruth Miller, Lumbee artist  
 
Category: 32. Archaeological studies of Robeson County and other pertinent areas

   DEGR001. Degregory, Lane. “Fragments of day-to-day living recovered in Outer Banks digs.” The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk) 5 March 1996: B1.

Publication type: Newspaper article

Electronic access: LEXIS-NEXIS Academic Universe

East Carolina University students, directed by David S. Phelps (head of East Carolina University's archaeological laboratory), spent spring break on the Outer Banks, investigating two sites (in Buxton and in Frisco).  The Buxton site was the capital village of the Croatan Indians, who lived on the southern end of Hatteras and northern end of Ocracoke from 1000-1700 A.D.  The site will show researchers how the Croatans lived in the 1500s.  Phelps notes that the Buxton site corresponds to the location marked on John White's 1585 map as the Croatan capital.  Croatan Indians were the people encountered by John White's colony and, it is presumed, are the people the Lost Colonists left Roanoke Island and intermingled with.  A Web page created by Nancy Cowal, Cape Hatteras School's Media Coordinator and a participant in the dig, shows some photographs of the site and some items found (www.outer-banks.com/hatteras-school/Dig.html).
Note:  Dr. Phelps, now retired from East Carolina, continues to do work at the Buxton site and was there as recently as April 1999.  He is planning a popular monograph on the site and on his research.

This annotation was edited on: June 24, 2002

Home Page URL: lumbeebibliography.net

 

 
 
 
Copyright © 2001, Glenn Ellen Starr Stilling. 
This document may be reproduced only if this copyright notice is reproduced with it.