1. Armstrong, A. D. (2011). Archaeology, historic preservation, and tourism in the Kongens Quarter, Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas (formerly Danish West Indies). In Proceedings, 23rd International Association of Caribbean Archaeologists (pp. 185–199). Antigua.
2. Armstrong, D. V., Hauser, M., Knight, D., & Lenik, S. (2009). Variation in venues of slavery and freedom: Interpreting the Late Eighteenth-Century Cultural Landscape of St. John, Danish West Indies Using an Archaeological GIS. In International Journal of Historical Archaeology 13(1), 94–111.
3. Armstrong, D. V., & Williamson, C. H. (2011). The Magens house, Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas, Danish West Indies: Archaeology of an urban house compound and its relationship to local interactions and global trade. In L. A. Curet & M. W. Hauser (Eds.), Islands at the crossroads: Migration, seafaring, and interaction in the Caribbean (pp. 137–163). Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press.
4. Armstrong, D. V., Knight, D. & Hauser M. (2005). The early shoreline settlement at Cinnamon Bay, St. John, USVI: Before formal colonization to the slave rebellion of 1733. In Proceedings of the XX Congreso International de Arqueologia del Caribe, Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic: Museo del Hombre 38(2), 743–750.
5. Ascher, R., & Fairbanks, C. H. (1971). Excavation of a slave cabin: Georgia, USA. Historical Archaeology, 5(1), 3–17.