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  • Frobenius-Institut  (2)
  • München UB
  • 2015-2019  (2)
  • 1990-1994
  • New York, NY : American Museum of Natural History  (2)
  • Archäologie  (2)
  • 1
    ISSN: 0065-9452
    Language: English
    Pages: 216 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Series Statement: Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 103
    Keywords: USA Nevada ; Archäologie ; Prähistorie, NA
    Abstract: Unique among Great Basin archaeological studies, this volume presents the results of a massive excavation program directed at five open-air sites. These sites are clustered adjacent to several springs of uncertain reliability, bound to the north by the lifeless expanse of the Black Rock playa, and to the south by dune fields, alluvial fans, and barren hills marginal by even Great Basin standards.Within this forbidding landscape, Native peoples somehow eked out a living at various times during the Holocene, tied to the vicissitudes of climate change. Full-blown residential activity springs to life during wet periods, only to be eclipsed by the next drought cycle. This dynamic archaeological record provides not only insight into the adaptive responses associated with environmental instability, but also commentary on a host of other research themes, including the rise of residential stability and logistical hunting, toolstone use and conveyance, shifts in domestic and habitation patterns, resource intensification, as well as a surprising reorganization of settlement strategy during the final period of prehistoric occupation. (Umschlagtext)
    Description / Table of Contents: Abstract -- Introduction -- Environmental Context. Modern Climate. Modern Fauna and Flora. Environments of the Latest Pleistocene and Holocene -- Cultural Context. Prehistoric Context. Ethnographic Context. Field and Laboratory Methods. Laboratory and Analytical Methods -- Chronological Controls. Projectile Points. Shell Beads. Glass, Stone, and Bone Beads. Radiocarbon. Building Spatio-temporal Components -- 26HU1830 Site Report -- 26HU1876 Site Report -- 26HU2871 Site Report -- 26HU3118 Site Report -- 26HU5621 Site Report -- Summary and Conclusions -- Acknowledgments -- References
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  • 2
    ISBN: 978-0-9852016-5-4
    ISSN: 0065-9452
    Language: English
    Pages: 405 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme
    Series Statement: Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 101
    Keywords: Nevada Paläo-Indianer ; Shoshone ; Besiedlungsgeschichte ; Archäologie
    Abstract: The Ruby Pipeline originates in Opal, Wyoming, travels westward across Utah and Nevada, and terminates in Malin, Oregon. Almost 360 miles of the line is in Nevada, where it crosses through some of the most remote, sparsely populated land in the lower 48 states. Despite the remote nature of this corridor, it has produced a rich archaeological record reflecting a dynamic history of land-use pattern changes over a period of at least 13,000 years. Archaeological excavations were conducted at 578 prehistoric sites prior to construction of the pipeline. The sites were distributed across four ecological regions, including (from west to east): the High Rock Country, Upper Lahontan Basin, Upper Humboldt Plains, and Thousand Springs Valley. First evidence of human occupation dates to the Paleoindian (14,500-12,800 cal b.p.) and Paleoarchaic (12,800-7800 cal b.p.) periods, when people spent most of their time in the High Rock Country where important economic resources reached their highest densities. Paleoindian findings are limited to a series of Great Basin Concave Base projectile points and small obsidian flaked stone concentrations. Paleoarchaic sites are much more common, and tend to be represented by Great Basin Stemmed projectile points, bifaces, and a limited number of other flaked stone tools. Most of these assemblages reflect small groups of hunters refurbishing their tool kits as they traveled through the area. An important exception to this pattern was found at Five Mile Flat along the west end of pluvial Lake Parman where two significant habitation sites dating to 11,180 cal b.p. were discovered. One of these sites includes a house floor, which is the oldest ever found in the Great Basin. Despite the warm-dry conditions that characterized much of the middle Holocene, it appears that human populations nearly doubled during the Post-Mazama Period (7800-5700 cal b.p.). Most activity remained concentrated in the High Rock Country, but evidence for occupation begins to trickle out into the Upper Lahontan Basin and Upper Humboldt Plains regions as well. Most of the artifact assemblages remain rather narrow, often composed of Northern Side-notched and Humboldt Concave Base points, bifaces, and debitage, and reflect use of the region by mobile groups of hunters. Major changes took place with the arrival of the Early Archaic (5700-3800 cal b.p.) and continued forward into the Middle Archaic Period (3800-1300 cal b.p.). Early Archaic projectile points are largely ...
    Note: Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 373-405
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