Long House (Site Type Keyword)

Parent: Domestic Structures

A long, relatively narrow multi-family dwelling, best known as a typical village dwelling used by Iroquois Confederacy tribes.

1-25 (32 Records)

Archaeological Site Survey Records
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

Archaeological site survey records for the Fox Lair site.


Area A Site Plan
IMAGE Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

This is a site plan for Area A of the Fox Lair site.


Area B Site Plan
IMAGE Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

This is a site plan for Area B of the Fox Lair site.


Area C Site Plan
IMAGE Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

This is a site plan for Area C of the Fox Lair site.


Curation Request Form
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

This is the curation request form for the Fox Lair site.


Eaton Site
PROJECT Uploaded by: William Engelbrecht

This project contains data from 17 seasons of excavation from the Eaton Site in West Seneca, NY just south of the city of Buffalo. It is a multi-component site that was occupied intermittently from late Paleo-Indian times through the early 19th century when it contained a cabin on what was then the Buffalo Creek Reservation. The bulk of material recovered from the site is from an Iroquoian village dating to the mid-sixteenth century. The major portions of three longhouses and a palisade...


Excavation Unit Forms
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

These are the excavation unit forms for the fall 1990 season.


Excavations Site Plan
IMAGE Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

This is a site plan of the excavations at Fox Lair.


Filling the Archaeological Void: Saint Lawrence Iroquoians in Alburg, Vermont (2005)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Thomas R. Jamison.

Samuel de Champlain reported the presence of Native American groups around the north end of Lake Champlain prior to 1609 (Bassett 1967). However, the archeaology of Grand Isle County, Vermont, has only been minimally examined. Few archaeological sites have been previously identified in the town of Alburg, a pattern that is characteristic of the county overall.. Until recently, most of the sites identified in the town were found by collectors and have not been confirmed by controlled excavation...


Fox Lair
PROJECT Susan E. Bamann. University at Albany.

Fox Lair was discovered by Susan Bamann in 1989 while she was looking for the previously located Johnson site. The location of the Johnson site was incorrect in the New York State Museum files. Bamann found little or nothing where the Johnson site was supposedly located. It's clear that Fox Lair and Johnson are the same site. The site is located in the state of New York on a ridge near Otsquago Creek, Fort Plain, and the Mohawk River.


Fox Lair Catalog
DATASET Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

This is an inventory of artifacts collected from the Fox Lair site.


Fox Lair Catalog Guide
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

This is a guide to the Fox Lair site.


Fox Lair Floor Plans
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

These are floor plans for the fall 1990 season at Fox Lair.


Fox Lair Magnetometer Plots
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

These are magnetometer plots for 9/23/90.


Fox Lair Site Plan
IMAGE Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

This is a site plan of the Fox Lair site.


Magnetometer Survey Area
IMAGE Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

This is an image of the magnetometer survey area of the Fox Lair site.


North Atlantic Biocultural Organization (NABO)
PROJECT CUNY Northern Science and Education Center. Thomas McGovern.

This project file contains NABO publications. NABO was founded over 20 years ago to attempt to cross-cut national and disciplinary boundaries and to help North Atlantic scholars make the most of the immense research potential of our damp and lovely research area. NABO has worked to aid in improving basic data comparability, in assisting practical fieldwork and interdisciplinary ventures, in promoting student training, and in better communicating our findings to other scholars, funding...


A Rincon Phase Occupation at the Julian Wash Site, AZ BB:13:17 (ASM) (1996)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Jonathan B. Mabry.

This report summarizes the results of an archaeological mitigation project for a 30-ft-wide right-of-way for an access road to Tucson Water's new reservoir at the Julian Wash site, AZ BB:13:17 (ASM). This project uncovered a cluster of five pithouses and 36 related extramural features that date to the transition between the Middle and Late Rincon subphases in the Tucson Basin Hohokam chronology, about A.D 1070 to 1150. The cluster of pithouses is probably part of a larger house group arranged...


Second Woods (1995)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Dean Snow.

This section provides information on the Second Woods Site.


Second Woods
PROJECT Dean Snow. University at Albany.

The Second Woods site was excavated as part of the Mohawk Valley Project. The site is located in the town of Minden, New York, and lies on a long ridge that runs westward from the village of Fort Plain. Second Woods is one of several sites clustered in the town of Minden, on the south side of the Mohawk River. It may have been one of the communities that came together later at Otstungo. Second Woods is one of the few excavated examples of small villages that preceded the nucleation and...


Second Woods Catalog
DATASET Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

This data file contains an inventory of all the artifacts excavated during this excavation of the Second Woods site.


Second Woods Catalog Guide (2009)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

This is a guide to the Second Woods site.


Second Woods Field Notes
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

These are the field notes from the 1990 and 1991 excavations at Second Woods.


Second Woods Floor Plans
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

Here are floor plans from the 1990 and 1991 seasons of excavation.


Second Woods Images
IMAGE Uploaded by: Amanda Sacks

Uploaded here are images of trench 6, the area 6 floor plan, a satellite view of the site, and the site plan.