The village encompassed around 2-3 acres of land with huts, refuse pits and burial features ringing a central plaza devoid of any structure.
The eastern side of the site has not been investigated as permission has been repeatedly refused by the landowner.
The location was fenced off to keep trespassers out and also to mark the village bounds from the local mining operations.
The site was severely "potholed" (cylindrical sections are dug up and sifted, compared to a large square excavation), revealing pottery shards, bone fragments, arrow heads and beads.
Several excavations during the late 1970s by Kent State University's archaeological department further discovered hundreds of animal bone fragments, pottery shards, arrow heads, cannel coal pendants, shells, beads, as well as a burial pit containing a female skeleton.