A 2008 report prepared by New South Associates (edited by R. Jeannine Windham, Christopher Espenshade, and Julie Coco) details excavations and analysis of materials associated with the remains of Middle Woodland household at the Hardin Bridge site (9-Br-34) in northwest Georgia. The report is available on Chris Espenshade's Academia.edu page.
The preserved architectural features at the site did not allow the unambiguous definition of the outlines of a single structure. Based on artifact analysis, the authors interpret the Middle Woodland remains at the site to be the product of single household that would have occupied a single residential structure. That structure was likely an oval or rounded rectangular structure measuring about 9m in width and 11m or 20m in length (Windham et al. 2008). The illustration above (Figure 11.1 from Windham et al. 2008:423) shows the outline of a structure with larger dimensions in blue and the most likely candidate for a smaller structure outlined in pink. The Hardin Bridge structure will be added to the database as Structure 2234.
The preserved architectural features at the site did not allow the unambiguous definition of the outlines of a single structure. Based on artifact analysis, the authors interpret the Middle Woodland remains at the site to be the product of single household that would have occupied a single residential structure. That structure was likely an oval or rounded rectangular structure measuring about 9m in width and 11m or 20m in length (Windham et al. 2008). The illustration above (Figure 11.1 from Windham et al. 2008:423) shows the outline of a structure with larger dimensions in blue and the most likely candidate for a smaller structure outlined in pink. The Hardin Bridge structure will be added to the database as Structure 2234.