Projects
 
Selected Projects
Archaeologists from Archaeo-Geophysical Associates has worked in both CRM and Research settings.  Here are some highlights.
 
The Bowie County Levee Re-alignment Project, was a Cultural Resources Management project conducted by Lopez Garcia Group, LLC for the US Army Corps of Engineers. Archaeologists from AGA, LLC were successful in locating several prehistoric Caddo structures at the Hill Farm Site (41BW169) and the Horace Cabe Site  (41BW4)  village areas and a mound site associated with the Caddo community, believed to be the Upper Nasoni village depicted in the 1692 map from the Teran de los Rios expedition.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Archaeo-Geophysical Associates, LLC conducted Ground Penetrating Radar, Resistivity, and Gradiometery at the Mack Hatcher Cemetery (40WM338) southeast of Franklin, TN.  Project was conducted for Weaver & Associates, LLC who was contracted by the Tennessee Department of Transportation.
 
 
 
 
Archaeo-Geophysical Associates, LLC conducted geophysical survey for a project led by Archaeological & Environmental Consultants, LLC for Nacogdoches County.  The project documents sites which will be impacted by the proposed Lake Naconiche.  Here we present our findings at two small Caddo Hamlets.
 
 
 
 
The George C. Davis Project is a joint project between the University of Texas and Texas Parks and Wildlife. This project has been conducted under the direction of Samuel Wilson and Darrell Creel of The University of Texas at Austin, and is the subject matter of the Doctoral Dissertations of both Chester P. Walker and T. Clay Schultz of AGA, LLC. The George C. Davis project has been successful at locating nearly 100 new Caddo structures and several other anomalies at the site.
 
 
 
 
The Etowah Project is a joint research conducted by members of the Muscogee Creek Nation of Oklahoma and Archaeologists from the South Carolina Institute of Archaeology and Anthropology, Texas State University, and AGA, LLC. As part of this project, archaeologists from AGA, LLC have spent the past two summers (2005 and 2006) conducting archaeo-geophysical surveys at the Etowah site in northwestern Georgia. So far the team has located a series of structures on the summit of Mound A and several clusters of structures and anomalies at the village level.