Copyright © 2024 Illinois Association for Advancement of Archaeology
Publications - Illinois Antiquity
Illinois Antiquity
Illinois Antiquity Author Guidelines
Rediscovery
Special Publications
Illinois Antiquity
Members of IAAA receive Illinois Antiquity quarterly and an occasional journal, Rediscovery. In addition to these, other Special Publications occasionally appear.
Illinois Antiquity is a full-color quarterly published by the Illinois Association for Advancement of Archaeology, a non-profit educational group that includes avocational archaeologists, professional archaeologists, students, and members of the public with an interest in archaeology.
Click here to download a free sample issue of Illinois Antiquity.
Click here to download our 2012 Illinois Archaeology Awareness Month issue.
Illinois Antiquity Author Guidelines
2024 ILLINOIS ANTIQUITY AUTHOR GUIDELINES
Illinois Antiquity (IA) is a full‐color quarterly published by the Illinois Association for Advancement of Archaeology (IAAA), a non‐profit educational group that includes avocational archaeologists, professional archaeologists, students, and members of the public with an interest in archaeology.
While winners of IAAA’s Permanent Fund Grant must produce an IA article reporting their results, the quarterly publishes a variety of articles, reports, announcements, and book reviews. IA is also interested in publishing yearly IAAA chapter reports, biographies, and artifact summaries.
Submissions are due on the first of September, November, February, and April. IA is sent through regular post on the first of October, December, March, and May.
Author guidelines are simple and are listed on the mailing page of IA. In short, to be considered for publication, a manuscript must:
1. Be no more than 1500 words, submitted in standard word processing format (.doc or .docx).
2. Include no more than four figures, saved as individual, high resolution .jpegs in 300 dpi.
3. Include references when appropriate (but not required).
4. Be submitted to the editor’s email: dfsj381@gmail.com before a submission date.
We welcome your interest in IA and look forward to publishing your manuscript.
– Dr. Dale F. Simpson Jr., Editor & Dan Bartlett, Layout
Rediscovery
The Illinois Association for Advancement of Archaeology (IAAA) is excited to announce the publication and release of Rediscovery Vol. 8, edited by Mr. Mounds himself, William R. Iseminger.
In this issue, there are several types of articles by a variety of authors. This is something Rediscovery does, providing a mix of topics and author backgrounds, from avocational to professional. Thus, you will see different approaches in how the information is presented.
The first article by William R. Iseminger, is a condensed version of the history of archaeological research in Illinois from the 1800s to the mid-1960s. Iseminger is an archaeologist who worked at Cahokia Mounds for five decades, now retired, and who had a focus on public archaeology and interpretation throughout his career. He also was IAAA editor for Illinois Antiquity from 1978-1984 and has served as journal editor for Rediscovery from its inception in 1988 to the present. He has served on the IAAA board for decades, and on the Cahokia Archaeological Society chapter board.
The second article by Carolyn Stevens, Robert Maxwell, and Barbara Ross, provides an intriguing study of the history of the York Trail and Lincoln Way in Crawford, Clark, and Coles counties in southeastern Illinois during the early 1800s and their important role in the development of and settlement in that region. All three authors are members of the Central Wabash Archaeology Chapter of IAAA and Carolyn has been a member of the IAAA board of directors for many years. All are avocational archaeologists and have participated in archaeological and historical research in their area and have helped in the development of the Archaeology Museum in Robinson, Illinois, which preserves and displays the history of Native Americans and early settlers in that region of Illinois.
The test excavations into Mound 1 at the eastern edge of the Mississippian Cahokia site, in Madison County, Illinois, is the topic of the third article. This small mound had not been explored previously and had a historic home on its summit that had been demolished and there was a possible threat to what remained of the mound. Dr. Gayle J. Fritz from Washington University in St. Louis (now Professor Emerita) brought her field methods class to test the mound in 1991. Dr. John Kelly, also from Washington University (now retired) and a long-time Cahokia archaeologist, and William Iseminger, from Cahokia Mounds (now retired), directed the field work. Their excavations on the southern slope revealed modern fill burying the original mound and provided information suggesting Mound 1 was built late in Cahokia’s history. Dr. William G. Gartner is a geomorphologist and on the academic staff in the Geography Department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. The first three authors are members of the Cahokia Archaeological Society (CAS) chapter of IAAA, and several members of CAS also participated in the excavations.
The final article explores the geophysical (remote sensing), historical, and genealogical research conducted in the historic Scott Settlement area on the banks of the DuPage River in DuPage County in northern Illinois. The Phase-1 testing identified subsurface features and anomalies, including the location of the Scott Cabin, the first single-family pioneer home in Naperville, and will help indicate areas for future research to learn more about this historical area. The research was conducted by Dr. Dale F. Simpson, Jr. (IAAA board member and Editor of Illinois Antiquity; College of DuPage; Illinois State Archaeological Survey; Chicago Archaeological Society chapter of IAAA); Dr. Timothy Horsley (Director of Horsley Archaeological Prospection, LLC; Northern Illinois University); Lucas Howser (University of Iowa; IAAA Board); and Mary Lou Wehrli (Local Historian).
Special Publications
Discover Illinois Archaeology
Full color, 28-page summary of Illinois culture history. Third printing, 2009. Out of Print. Click here for free .pdf version
Art and Archaeology: Spirit of the Ancients
September, 2004 Illinois Archaeology Awareness Month 32-page Illinois Antiquity special issue.
SEVEN NEW ARTICLES ON PREHISTORIC ARTIFACTS AND ART OF THE ARCHAIC, MIDDLE WOODLAND, LATE WOODLAND AND MISSISSIPPIAN PERIODS
15 COLOR ILLUSTRATIONS & A COLOR MINI-POSTER OF WOODLAND AND MISSISSIPPIAN ARTIFACTS FROM THE ART INSTITUTE EXHIBIT HERO, HAWK, AND OPEN HAND AN OVERVIEW OF THE HERO, HAWK, AND OPEN HAND
EXHIBIT AND A REVIEW OF THE EXHIBIT CATALOG BOOK