Ancient Communal / Public Structure (Site Type Keyword)
Parent: Communal / Public Structure
Specified area containing evidence that is associated with prehistoric communal or public activity.
201-225 (304 Records)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1987-88 Hinkson Excavation forms
OBAP 1988-94 Specimen & Photo Log (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1988-94 Specimen and Photograph Logs
OBAP 1992 LZ0901-0991 Survey Forms (1992)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1992 LZ0901-0991 Survey Forms
OBAP 1992 Survey Ceramic Tabulation Forms (1992)
OBAP 1992 Survey Ceramic Tabulation Forms
OBAP 1992,94 Survey and Excavation Groundstone Tabulation Forms (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1992 & 1994 Survey and Excavation Groundstone Tabulation Forms
OBAP 1994 Flotation, Pollen, & Dendro-C14 Forms (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1994 Flotation, Pollen, & Dendro-C14 Forms
OBAP 1994 Hinkson Excavation Forms (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1994 Hinkson Excavation Forms
OBAP 1994 In-Field Ceramic Tabulation Forms (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1994 In-Field Ceramic Tabulation Forms
OBAP 1994 KWK Field Journal (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1994 Keith Kintigh's Field Journal
OBAP 1994 LZ1001-1105 Survey Forms (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1994 LZ1001-1105 Survey Forms
OBAP 1994 Survey Ceramic Tabulation Forms (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1994 Survey Ceramic Tabulation Forms
OBAP Ceramic Database (2016)
Classified ceramics from the Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project, both survey and excavation.
OBAP Coding Sheet for Macrobotanical Database (2016)
Coding sheet for macrobotanical database associated with the Ojo Bonito Research Project.
OBAP Excavation Ceramic Tabulation Forms (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project: Hinkson, Jaralosa, H-Spear, & Ojo Bonito Excavation Ceramic Tabulation Forms
OBAP Hinkson & Jaralosa Map Scans (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project Hinkson & Jaralosa Maps Scans and Notes
OBAP Hinkson Midden Ceramic and Lithic Counts (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project Hinkson Midden Ceramic and Lithic Counts
OBAP Hinkson Midden Unit Summaries and Rubble Mound Heights (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project Hinkson Midden Unit Summaries and Rubble Mound Heights
OBAP Hinkson Trans Log, Clay Form, & Misc. Analyses (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project Hinkson Transect Log, Clay Form, & Misc. Analyses
OBAP Hinkson Unit Summaries 13,15-17 & GK3 (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project Hinkson Unit Summaries 13,15-17 & GK3
OBAP M01, LZ400-401, H-Spear, Jaralosa Excavation Forms (1994)
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project M01, LZ400-401, LZ1087 (H-Spear), Jaralosa Excavation Forms
OBAP Macrobotanical Database (2016)
Macrobotanical database for the Ojo Bonito Research Project.
Obsidian Data for Terrace S25 (2015)
This file contains all of the data for the nearly 1200 pieces collected during the 2051 excavations on Terrace S25, Cerro Danush, Dainzú-Macuilxóchitl. Including material categories (prismatic blade, flake, point, etc.), measurements, color assignments, provenience, etc.
OCHOA PHASE INVESTIGATIONS ON THE MESCALERO PLAIN (2021)
This report presents a summary of the results of the Blanket Purchase Authority (BPA) 10 project sponsored by the Carlsbad Field Office (CFO) of the Bureau of Land Management and funded under the Permian Basin Programmatic Agreement. The BPA 10 project included six cultural resource projects, including survey inventories, site evaluations, and excavations.
Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project (OBAP)
A survey and excavation project directed by Keith Kintigh and executed from 1983 through 1994. Approximate 58km2 were surveyed and 560 sites were recorded. Substantial excavations were undertaken at the Hinkson Site great house complex and Jaralosa Pueblo. Test excavations were completed at H-Spear, a Chacoan Great House located by the project and Ojo Bonito Pueblo. The project took place on the ranch of Mrs. Everett (Mabel) Hinkson (deceased). Most of the project work was done as a part of...
Painted Cave Northern Arizona (1945)
The body of literature dealing with the archaeology of the San Juan drainage, while large, is strangely silent concerning the extreme northeastern corner of Arizona in the region of the Carrizo and Lukachukai Mountains. Prudden, in his classic study of the ruins in the San Juan watershed, mentions both surface and cave sites but they were small for the most part, and none received more than a cursory examination. Many years later, in 1924, a Peabody Museum expedition headed by Oliver LaFarge,...