Nebraska Archaeology
Clarks Historic Site
The Grand band of the Pawnee established this village some time after 1823 and remained there until about 1845. There is evidence that other bands lived at Clarks during the 1840
Ashland Archaeological District - NHR
The Ashland Archeological District, registered on the National Register of Historic Places, contains a variety of temporally diverse features, primarily representing late prehistoric (
Nehawka Flint Quarries - NHR
Early archeologists observed nearly 300
Burkett Archeological Site -NHR
Situated on a prominent natural terrace near the Loup River valley near Genoa, the Burkett Site comprises numerous earthlodge ruins covering an area of over 100
Genoa Site - NHR
After nearly three decades of Sioux harassment and epidemic diseases, all four bands of the Pawnee Confederation agreed by an 1857
Historical Indian Villages
These sites located throughout Saunders County have been registered as National Historic Places because of their valuable data revealed from diggings.
Lovitt Historical Site
Between A.D. 1675-1725 Apache peoples known as the Dismal River Complex (and related to populations in the southwest, eastern Colorado, and western Kansas)
Mowry Bluff Historic Site
National Historic Register
Red Smoke Historic Site
National Historic Register