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Battlespace 1865 - Archaeology of the Landscapes, Strategies, and Tactics of the North Platte Campaign, Nebraska (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,068
Discovery Miles 10 680
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Battlespace 1865 - Archaeology of the Landscapes, Strategies, and Tactics of the North Platte Campaign, Nebraska (Paperback)
Series: American Landscapes
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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For a period of about week in February 1865, as the Civil War was
winding down and Plains Indian communities were reeling in the wake
of the Sand Creek massacre, combat swept across the Nebraska
panhandle, especially along the Platte River. The fighting that
marked this event barely compares to the massive campaigns and
terrible carnage that marked the conflict that was taking place in
the eastern states but it was a significant event at the opening on
the ensuing Indian Wars. Operating on terrain they knew well,
Cheyenne warriors and other Native forces encountered the US
Cavalry who operated within a modern network of long distance
migration and pony express trails and military stations. The North
Platte Campaign offers a good basis for the application of
landscape approaches to conflict archaeology if only because of its
scale. This fighting is both easily approached and fascinatingly
encompassed. There were probably far fewer than 1000 fighters
involved in those skirmishes, but before, after, and between them,
they involved substantial movements of people and of equipment that
was similar to the arms and gear in service to other Civil War era
combatants. They also seem to have used approaches that were
typical of America's western warfare. Like many of the conflicts of
interest to modern observers, the North Platte fights were between
cultural different opponents. Archaeological consideration of
battlefields such as Rush Creek and Mud Springs, bases, and
landscapes associated with this fighting expose how the combat
developed and how the opposing forces dealt with the challenges
they encountered. This study draws on techniques of battlefield
archaeology, focusing on the concept of 'battlespace' and the
recovery, distribution and analysis of artifacts and weaponry, as
well as historical accounts of the participants, LiDAR-informed
terrain assessment, and theoretical consideration of the strategic
thinking of the combatants. It applies a landscape approach to the
archaeological study of war and reveals an overlooked phase of the
American Civil War and the opening of the Indian Wars.
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