Research Publications (if you are unable to find any of these, please email Dr. Trabert):
Hill, Matthew E. Jr., Sarah Trabert, Margaret E. Beck. 2022. The Dismal River Complex and Early Apache (Ndee) Presence on the Central Great Plains. In Holes in our Moccsssins, Holes in Our Stories: Apachean Origins and the Promontory, Franktwon, and Dismal River Archaeological Records, edited by John W. Ives, and Joel Janetski, pp. 225-242. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City.
Trabert Sarah. 2022. The Long-Term Consequences of Designating Native American Sites as European Creations. In Recognizing and Recording Post-1492 Indigenous Sites in North American Archaeology, edited by Lee M. Panich and Tsim Schneider. University Press of Florida.
Trabert, Sarah Matthew E. Hill, Jr., and Margaret E. Beck. 2022. Understand the Scott County Pueblo (14SC1) Occupation: Isolated Migrants or Community Builders? In People in a Sea of Grass: Archaeology’s Changing Perspective on Indigenous Plains communities, edited by Matthew E. Hill, Jr. and Lauren W. Ritterbush, pp. 131-143. University of Utah Press.
Trabert, Sarah and Kacy Hollenback. 2021. Archaeological Narratives of the North American Great Plains: From Ancient Pasts to Historic Resettlement. SAA Press: Current Perspectives Series.
Trabert, Sarah and Brandi Bethke. 2021. Reconceptualizing the Wichita Middle Ground in the Southern Plains. In Handbook of the Archaeology of Indigenous-Colonial Interaction in the Americas, edited by Lee M. Panich and Sara L. Gonzalez. Routledge Press.
Trabert, Sarah. 2020. Understanding the Significance of Migrants’ Material Culture. Journal of Social Archaeology, 21(1): 95-115.
Trabert, Sarah. 2019. Partners and Power: Understanding Ancestral Wichita and French Trade at the Deer Creek (34KA3) Site. International Journal of Historic Archaeology, 23(2), 444-461.
Trabert, Sarah. 2019. Reframing the Protohistoric Period and the (Peri)Colonial Process for the North American Central Plains. World Archaeology 50(5):820-834.
Hill, Matthew E. and Sarah Trabert. 2018. Reconsidering Dismal River Aspect: A Review of Evidence for an Apachean Affiliation. Plains Anthropologist 63(247):198-222.
Hill, Matthew E., Margaret E. Beck, Stacey Lengyel, Sarah Trabert, and Mary Adair. 2018. A Hard Time to Date: The Scott County Pueblo (14SC1) and Puebloan Residents of the High Plains. American Antiquity 83(1):54-74.
Trabert, Sarah. 2017. Considering the Indirect Effects of Colonialism: Example from a Great Plains Middle Ground. Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 48:17-27.
Trabert, Sarah, Matthew E. Hill, Jr., and Delaney Cooley. 2017. New Excavations in Scott State Park: Preliminary Findings from 14SC409. Kansas Anthropologist 35:27-46.
Trabert, Sarah and Matthew E. Hill, Jr. 2017. When Ethnography and Archaeology Meet: A Discussion of Dismal River Aspect Mortuary Practices. Kansas Anthropologist 35:47-61.
Trabert, Sarah. 2016. An Assessment of Dismal River Ceramics in Colorado. Southwestern Lore 81(4):1-23.
Trabert, Sarah, Sunday Eiselt, David Hill, Jeffrey Ferguson, Margaret Beck. 2016. Following a Glittering Trail: Geo-chemical and Petrographic Characterization of Micaceous Sherds Recovered from Dismal River Sites. American Antiquity 81(2):364-374.
Beck, Margaret E., Sarah Trabert, David V. Hill, and Matthew E. Hill. 2016. Tewa Red and the Puebloan Diaspora: The Making of Ledbetter Red. Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 6: 148-159.
Beck, Margaret and Sarah Trabert. 2014. Puebloan Occupation of the Scott County Pueblo, Western Kansas. American Antiquity 79(2): 314-336.
Trabert, Sarah. 2014. Spanish Colonialism in Nebraska? Determining the Indirect Effects of Colonialism on the Dismal River aspect (A.D. 1650-1725). Central Plains Archaeology, 14(1):117:134.
Trabert, Sarah. 2011. A Re-Examination of Glenwood Locality Ceramic Variation and Vessel Forms. Plains Anthropologist 56(220): 331-346.
Trabert, Sarah. 2011. An Analysis of Ceramics from 14SC409. Kansas Anthropologist, 32:19-22.
Trabert, Sarah. 2009. Steed-Kisker Ceramics: Analysis of the Scott Site (14SV1082) Assemblage. Plains Anthropologist 54(212): 289-299.