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User:Donald Albury/Indigenous canals

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Mud Lake Canal

The Florida Anthropologist
 51(1): 15-24
Tequesta 19: 29-63
  • Luer, George M. (June 1989). "Calusa Canals in Southwestern Florida: Routes of Tribute and Exchange". The Florida Anthropologist. 42 (2): 89–130 – via University of Florida Digital Collections.

The Pine Island Canal is one of several prehistoric canoe canals in southern Florida. The Mud Lake Canal (8MO32), which crosses the base of Cape Sable in Everglades National Park, is the best preserved of the canals. Nearby is the obscure Snake Bight Canal (8MO29). The Naples Canal (8CR59), in Naples, Florida, has been destroyed by development. Two canals connect the archaeological site at Ortona with Lake Okeechobee and the Caloosahatchee River. Another canoe canal, Walker's Canal (8WL344), has been described in Walton County, in the Florida Panhandle.

Walker's Canal http://www.academia.edu/494776/Geographic_Evaluation_of_Moreno_Point_Florida_-_Rediscovering_S._T._Walkers_7_Mile_Lake

Pine Island Canal

The Florida Anthropologist
 53(1): 62-63
 54(1): 55-56
 50: 115-131
 54(2): 87-89
 44(1): 59-75

Ortona Canals

The Florida Anthropologist
 55(1): 3-22
 48: 265-281

Naples Canal

The Florida Anthropologist 51(1): 25-36

Snake Bight Canal

Calusa Canals

The Florida Anthropologist 51(1): 89-130

Walker's Canal

Ryan J. Wheeler
Walker's Canal: An Aboriginal Canal in the Florida Panhandle
Southeastern Archaeology 17: 174-181