"This publication should serve the archaeological community well for years to come. Kansas Archaeology is well written and edited, and up-to-date. It contains an indispensable wealth of information for anyone interested in the archaeology of the Central and Southern Plains."—Missouri Archaeological Society Quarterly
"A new comprehensive overview. This new work synthesizes the archaeological research that has been conducted over the last 50 years within the state. Hoard and Banks have assembled a virtual who’s who in Kansas archaeology to come up with sixteen chapters describing the cultural sequence within the region, as well as topics ranging from prehistoric plant utilization, sources of stone for tool manufacture, and the effects of landscape evolution on site preservation. . . . A welcome addition to anyone who works in the central Plains or has an interest in Kansas history. . . . Kansas Archaeology has a lot to offer to both the professional and avocational archaeologist."—Journal of the Iowa Archeological Society
"Nineteen of the most prominent researchers in the disciplines of Kansas prehistory are brought together in this work. . . . A valuable resource in light of the breadth and depth of data on Kansas archaeology that are brought together here."—Kansas History
"An invaluable resource for archeologists and students, Kansas Archaeology is also accessible to interested laypeople—anyone needing a summary of the material remains that have been found in Kansas."—Kansas Preservation
"[This book] is built upon a foundation established by Waldo Wedel’s Intoduction to Kansas Archaeology (1959) and Patricia O’Brien’s Archaeology in Kansas (1984), and stands as an invaluable contemporary synthesis of Kansas’s prehistory. Archaeologists, students, and interested members of the public will find it a useful resource."—Nebraska History
“A rich overview that provides the latest word about what the earliest Kansans were doing between about 12,000 years ago and the arrival of Europeans.”—W. Raymond Wood, author of Archaeology on the Great Plains
“A useful and remarkable volume. . . . The Sunflower State now has good reason to promote its archaeological heritage as central to understanding Plains prehistory.”—Don Wyckoff, Curator of Archaeology, Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History
“A nicely written, lavishly illustrated, and indispensable guide to Kansas, to the Plains, and indeed, to North America as a whole.”—Marvin Kay, professor of anthropology, University of Arkansas