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Articles 95281 - 95310 of 95605
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
"Swedish" Colonial Yellow Bricks: Notes On Their Uses And Possible Origins In 17th Century America, Marshall Joseph Becker
"Swedish" Colonial Yellow Bricks: Notes On Their Uses And Possible Origins In 17th Century America, Marshall Joseph Becker
Anthropology & Sociology Faculty Publications
Small bricks of yellow color are often found at early colonial sites along the eastern seaboard. These building elements are usually associated with Swedish and Dutch constructions of the 17th century. Despite their frequency at such sites, little has been written about them and still less research has been conducted regarding their history. In order to initiate a study of this class of artifacts, some basic information is presented along with the limited data derived from the yellow brick remains recovered during excavations directed toward revealing an early house foundation in Governor Printz Park (36DE3) in southeastern Pennsylvania. These remains …
Egyptian Clay Anthropoid Coffin, Lisa Sabbahy Dr.
Egyptian Clay Anthropoid Coffin, Lisa Sabbahy Dr.
Faculty Journal Articles
No abstract provided.
Pvn-005-Urban-Field Notes-1977, Patricia Urban
Pvn-005-Urban-Field Notes-1977, Patricia Urban
Four Valleys Archive
No abstract provided.
A Faunal Analysis Of Five Woodland Period Archaeological Sites In Southwestern Michigan, Terrance J. Martin
A Faunal Analysis Of Five Woodland Period Archaeological Sites In Southwestern Michigan, Terrance J. Martin
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
Bulletin Of The Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Vol. 38, Nos. 1 And 2, Massachusetts Archaeological Society
Bulletin Of The Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Vol. 38, Nos. 1 And 2, Massachusetts Archaeological Society
Bulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society
- A New Challenge for Massachusetts Archaeology (John Rosser)
- The Fort Hill Bluff Site (William B. Taylor)
- A Unique Artifact from Raynham, Mass. (Maurice Robbins)
- Land Occupied by the Nipmuck Indians of Central New England (Dennis A. Connole)
- Portable Structures and Winter Archaeology (Billee Hoornebeek and Charles E. Bolian)
- Lithic Analysis of a Mudstone/”Argillite” Workshop: The Wills Hill Site (Alan E. Strauss)
- What Is It? (William S. Fowler)
The Okehocking: A Remnant Band Of Delaware Indians, Marshall Joseph Becker
The Okehocking: A Remnant Band Of Delaware Indians, Marshall Joseph Becker
Anthropology & Sociology Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Archaeology On State Highway 16: The Crystal Rivers Site, John Esten Keller
Archaeology On State Highway 16: The Crystal Rivers Site, John Esten Keller
Documents from the Texas State Department of Highways
The Crystal Rivers Site (41 BX 195) was recorded during a survey of State Highway 16 in May 1973. The site consists of an extensive occupation area with its prominent feature being a large, but scattered, burned rock midden. The site is located on the east bank of a western tributary of Government Canyon Creek approximately two miles southeast of the small community of San Geronimo in Bexar County. Due to the extensive accumulation of cultural material within the right-of-way of the proposed widening of State Highway 16, further investigation was recommended. Thoughout July of 1973, under Antiquities Permit No. …
Archaeology On State Highway 16: No-Name Creek Site: A Terrace Site Of The Middle And Late Archaic Period In Gillespie County, Texas, Joe T. Denton
Archaeology On State Highway 16: No-Name Creek Site: A Terrace Site Of The Middle And Late Archaic Period In Gillespie County, Texas, Joe T. Denton
Documents from the Texas State Department of Highways
No-Name Creek is a multicomponent site in a nonstratified context north of the town of Fredericksburg in Gillespie County, Texas. This site, where excavated, is purely Archaic and is of primary importance due to the unique artifact assemblage. The point types extant at the site suggest an evolution of one type to another.
Bulletin Of The Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Vol. 37, Nos. 3 And 4, Massachusetts Archaeological Society
Bulletin Of The Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Vol. 37, Nos. 3 And 4, Massachusetts Archaeological Society
Bulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society
- In Appreciation: William S. Fowler (Maurice Robbins)
- An Editorial Greeting and Exhortation (Dena F. Dincauze)
- A Bifurcated Point Concentration (William B. Taylor)
- A Rare Pipe Discovery (William S. Fowler)
- A Unique Artifact from Cape Cod (Maurice Robbins)
- The Arrowsic Island Petroglyph (Edward J. Lenik)
- New Discoveries at Swan Hold (William S. Fowler)
Contributions To Tualatin Ethnography: Subsistence And Ethnobiology, Henry B. Zenk
Contributions To Tualatin Ethnography: Subsistence And Ethnobiology, Henry B. Zenk
Dissertations and Theses
There is a considerable amount of unpublished source material on Kalapuyan ethnography. This consists primarily of manuscript field notes from three linguistically trained scholars: Albert S. Gatschet, who collected Kalapuyan linguistic and ethnographic data during a visit to Grand Ronde Reservation in 1877, Leo J. Frachtenberg, who worked with a number of Kalapuyan informants from 1913 to 1915, and Melville Jacobs, who worked with the last surviving speakers of Kalapuyan languages during a number of sessions between 1928 and 1936. Data from these three authorities, plus other available data, reveal many details about aboriginal Kalapuyan life ("aboriginal" here referring to …
The 1974-75 Archaeological Survey In The Wallace Reservoir, Greene, Hancock, Morgan, And Putnam Counties, Georgia, Chester B. Depratter
The 1974-75 Archaeological Survey In The Wallace Reservoir, Greene, Hancock, Morgan, And Putnam Counties, Georgia, Chester B. Depratter
Faculty & Staff Publications
The Wallace Reservoir is a Georgia Power Company generating facility currently being constructed 12 miles northwest of Sparta, Georgia. When completed (late in 1978), the Wallace Reservoir will flood 18,000 acres along the Oconee and Apalachee Rivers and their tributaries. An additional 3,000 acres of shoreline will be adversely affected by the presence of the reservoir.
Prior to 1974, three archaeological surveys were conducted in the Wallace Reservoir and its environs. In 1971, the Department of Anthropology, University of Georgia, conducted a 10 week survey of the project area with funding from the Georgia Power Company. During the summer of …
Ye'kwana Basketry: Its Cultural Context, Raymond B. Hames, Ilene Hames
Ye'kwana Basketry: Its Cultural Context, Raymond B. Hames, Ilene Hames
Department of Anthropology: Faculty Publications
The aim of this article is to describe an aspect of Ye'kwana (Makiritare) technology, basketry, in its overall cultural context. We will not only describe basketry as technology per se but the role it plays in Ye'kwana symbolism, ecology, economy and social organization. Also, we will discuss its role in inter-village and inter-ethnic trade and how this role has implications for understanding socio-cultural change in the immediate area of the Padamo River Basin, Territorio Federal Amazonas, Venezuela.
Archaeological Investigations At Sites In The Upper Cibolo Creek Watershed, Central Texas, Thomas C. Kelly, Thomas R. Hester
Archaeological Investigations At Sites In The Upper Cibolo Creek Watershed, Central Texas, Thomas C. Kelly, Thomas R. Hester
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
In August, 1976, the Center for Archaeological Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio, conducted an intensive archaeological survey of the proposed Floodwater Retarding Structure No.1 area, in the Upper Cibolo Creek Watershed, Kendall County, Texas. The work was carried out under the terms of a contract (135-TX-SCS-76) with the U.S.D.A. Soil Conservation Service. An initial survey of this area had been conducted in February, 1975; two historic and 17 prehistoric archaeological sites were documented at that time (Bass and Hester 1975).
The intensive survey had three major objectives: (1) to conduct additional reconnaissance, thus insuring that all possible …
An Archaeological Assessment Of Boerne City Park, Kendall County, Texas, Thomas C. Kelly, Thomas R. Hester
An Archaeological Assessment Of Boerne City Park, Kendall County, Texas, Thomas C. Kelly, Thomas R. Hester
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
As part of its planning for development of Boerne City Park, the Advisory Board of the Boerne Parks and Recreation Department authorized an archaeological assessment of the park area in May, 1976. The assessment was carried out by the Center for Archaeological Research at The University of Texas at San Antonio, and was supervised by the authors. We wish to thank Dr. Dewey D. Davis, Chairman, Park Advisory Board, for his assistance during this project.
Archaeological Investigations At Sites Near Natalia, Medina County, Texas, Thomas R. Hester, Thomas C. Kelly
Archaeological Investigations At Sites Near Natalia, Medina County, Texas, Thomas R. Hester, Thomas C. Kelly
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
In January, 1976, Hayden Whitsett, archaeologist for the Texas Water Quality Board, carried out an initial archaeological reconnaissance of areas to be affected by the construction of new sewage treatment plant and lines in Natalia, Texas (Medina County WCID #3; Whitsett 1976). As a result of Whitsett's survey, five archaeological sites (41 ME 18-ME 22) were documented, and Whitsett suggested (ibid: 1) that four of these might be eligible for nomination to the National Register of Historic Sites.
Subsequent to his reconnaissance, Whitsett contacted the Center for Archaeological Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio, regarding a …
The Mcqueeney Municipal Utility District Project: An Archaeological Reconnaissance, T. C. Kelly, Thomas R. Hester
The Mcqueeney Municipal Utility District Project: An Archaeological Reconnaissance, T. C. Kelly, Thomas R. Hester
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
During late March, 1976, the Center for Archaeological Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio, conducted an archaeological reconnaissance in the vicinity of McQueeney, in Guadalupe County, Texas. This reconnaissance had been authorized by the McQueeney Municipal Utility District in connection with its plans for sewage lines and waste treatment facilities in the McQueeney area. Survey work was facilitated through contacts with URS Forrest and Cotton (project engineers) and with Mr. M. O. Stautzenberger, president of the utility district. We are grateful to Mr. Stautzenberger for providing the field team with a 1:300 aerial photograph of the project locality, …
An Historical And Archaeological Assessment Of The Proposed San Antonio Botanical Center, Stephen L. Black
An Historical And Archaeological Assessment Of The Proposed San Antonio Botanical Center, Stephen L. Black
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
During late July and early August, 1976, the Center for Archaeological Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio conducted an archaeological and historical assessment of the proposed San Antonio Botanical Center. The project was authorized by the City of San Antonio Department of Parks and Recreation, Ronald Darner, Director.
The archaeological and historical investigations at the proposed Botanical Center were carried out under the terms of Permit for Archaeological Investigation, No. 122, issued by the Texas Antiquities Committee.
Archaeological Test Excavations At Mission San Francisco De La Espada, Anne A. Fox, Thomas R. Hester
Archaeological Test Excavations At Mission San Francisco De La Espada, Anne A. Fox, Thomas R. Hester
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
In May, 1976, archaeological testing was carried out adjacent to the tower on the southeast corner of Mission San Francisco de la Espada (Fig. 1). The field work was conducted by an archaeological team from the Center for Archaeological Research, The University of Texas at San Antonio. Principal investigator for the project was Dr. Thomas R. Hester, Director of the Center; Research Associate Anne A. Fox was in charge of the field investigations. This research was done under the terms of State Antiquities Permit No. 112, issued to the Old, Spanish Missions Association, represented by Mr. Bernardo Fresquez, Superintendent.
In …
Archaeological Investigations At Fort Griffin State Historic Park Shackelford County, Texas, Anne A. Fox
Archaeological Investigations At Fort Griffin State Historic Park Shackelford County, Texas, Anne A. Fox
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
During March, April, and June of 1976 archaeological crews from the Center for Archaeological Research of The University of Texas at San Antonio worked a total of 96 man-days at Fort Griffin, Shackelford County, Texas. The work was done under terms of Interagency Cooperation Contract 0936 with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and Antiquities Permit No. 107. The project was administered by Dr. Thomas R. Hester, with Anne A. Fox serving as field director.
An Archaeological Survey For The Cibolo Creek Municipal Authority, South Central Texas, J. A. Jaquier
An Archaeological Survey For The Cibolo Creek Municipal Authority, South Central Texas, J. A. Jaquier
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
In November, 1976, an archaeological survey was carried out in portions of the Cibolo Creek watershed in Bexar, Comal and Guadalupe Counties in south-central Texas. These investigations resulted from an agreement between the Cibolo Creek Municipal Authority and the Center for Archaeological Research of The University of Texas at San Antonio. The archaeological assessment was necessitated by the proposed installation of gravity-fed sewage lines along tributaries of Cibolo Creek in the area surrounding the city of Selma, Texas. This report presents the results of the archaeological survey.
The Archaeology And History Of Alamo Plaza, Anne A. Fox, Feris A. Bass, Thomas R. Hester
The Archaeology And History Of Alamo Plaza, Anne A. Fox, Feris A. Bass, Thomas R. Hester
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
In the Spring of 1975, the Center for Archaeological Research was approached by the Parks and Recreation Department of the City of San Antonio regarding possible archaeological and historical research at Alamo Plaza. The proposed investigations were in connection with the city's plan to renovate the plaza, to coincide with the American Bicentennial. There were two major reasons for the Center's involvement: (1) the architects desired to learn, as a part of the renovation plans, the precise locations of the south wall of the original Alamo (San Antonio de Valero) compound; (2) in order to aid in the planning of …
The Texas Archaic: A Symposium, Thomas R. Hester
The Texas Archaic: A Symposium, Thomas R. Hester
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
The papers published in this volume were presented at a symposium entitled "The Texas Archaic 11” held in San Antonio on November 2, 1975, during the annual meeting of the Texas. Archeological Society. Of those papers delivered during this symposium, only one, "Archaic Diets and Food Economies" (by V. M. Bryant, Jr.), is not presently available for publication.
The present format has been utilized to insure rapid and economical publication of the symposium papers. The papers are primarily status reports, describing the current state of regional knowledge of the Archaic or dealing with specific aspects of the Archaic lifeway. As …
Hunters And Gatherers Of The Rio Grande Plain And The Lower Coast Of Texas, Thomas R. Hester
Hunters And Gatherers Of The Rio Grande Plain And The Lower Coast Of Texas, Thomas R. Hester
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
This paper summarizes the prehistoric cultural manifestations found on the Rio Grande Plain of Texas. The primary goal in this paper is to briefly outline the major prehistoric cultural traditions on the Rio Grande Plain. These traditions represent ecological adaptive responses made by the prehistoric inhabitants, and are reflected in the archaeology and ethnology of the area.
Papers On Paleo-Indian Archaeology In Texas: I, Thomas R. Hester
Papers On Paleo-Indian Archaeology In Texas: I, Thomas R. Hester
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
This third number in the Center's Special Report series contains two papers dealing with Paleo-Indian archaeology in Texas. Two additional papers dealing with this topic have recently been submitted. One involves a detailed review of the Plainview-Golondrina typological problem (authored by Thomas C. Kelly), and a second (written by Jules A. Jaquier), describing the bifacial implements from the Johnston-Heller site (41VT15).
Maya Lithic Studies: Papers From The 1976 Belize Filed Symposium, Thomas R. Hester, Norman Hammond
Maya Lithic Studies: Papers From The 1976 Belize Filed Symposium, Thomas R. Hester, Norman Hammond
Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
As a result of intensified archaeological activity in northern Belize, and specifically the work of the joint British Museum-Cambridge University research project (directed by Norman Hammond), a variety of new data have been obtained on the prehistory of this region. Of the many sites that have been mapped, tested, or otherwise investigated in the past few years, one stands out as a major center of ancient Maya lithic technology. This is the site of Colha, located south of Orange Walk Town, along the highway between that town and Belize City. Personnel of the British Museum-Cambridge University Corozal Project began limited …
Bulletin Of The Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Vol. 37, Nos. 1 And 2, Massachusetts Archaeological Society
Bulletin Of The Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Vol. 37, Nos. 1 And 2, Massachusetts Archaeological Society
Bulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society
- A Review of Dugout-making (William S. Fowler)
- Division of Labor: Archaeological Discoveries (William S. Fowler)
- Three Pembroke Burial Knives (William S. Fowler)
- Procurement and Use of Bark (William S. Fowler)
- The Cracked-Rock Shelter (Raymond Lemire)
- An Inquiry into the Contact Stage (William S. Fowler)
- Sharpening Stones (William S. Fowler)
- A Grooved Ax Study (William S. Fowler)
- Vandals with Ph.D.’s (Floyd Painter)
An Analysis Of The Stone Artifacts From Gallinas Springs, New Mexico, Marvin G. Keller
An Analysis Of The Stone Artifacts From Gallinas Springs, New Mexico, Marvin G. Keller
Masters Theses
No abstract provided.
Bulletin Of The Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Vol. 36, Nos. 3 And 4, Massachusetts Archaeological Society
Bulletin Of The Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Vol. 36, Nos. 3 And 4, Massachusetts Archaeological Society
Bulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society
- The Diagnostic Stone Bowl Industry (William S. Fowler)
- Magic Stones and Shamans (William S. Fowler)
- South Bay Quartzite Quarry (Raymond Lemire)
- Eating Practices in Aboriginal New England (William S. Fowler)
- A Hockamock Hearth Discovery (William S. Fowler)
- Significant Plummet Recoveries (William S. Fowler)
Human Skeletal Remains From Kato Zakro, Marshall Joseph Becker
Human Skeletal Remains From Kato Zakro, Marshall Joseph Becker
Anthropology & Sociology Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
The Ethnohistory Of Baker Cabin, A Clackamas County Pioneer Site, V. Claire Woodward
The Ethnohistory Of Baker Cabin, A Clackamas County Pioneer Site, V. Claire Woodward
Dissertations and Theses
Baker Cabin, a pioneer log structure, is located on privately owned property near the community of Carver, Oregon. According to traditional accounts the cabin has existed continuously on this site since its construction in 1856. Archaeological excavations of the cabin's foundation and the surrounding area uncovered date-able artifacts and a second foundation with an associated well. Analysis of the artifacts associated with the present cabin foundation indicate a post-1870 construction date those associated with the second foundation and its well indicate an 1850’s occupation.
Four hypotheses that are explored in this paper can be derived from the interpretation of all …