District of Columbia (State / Territory) (Geographic Keyword)

6,176-6,200 (8,259 Records)

Posey (18CH281): Finished and Unfinished Beads (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Finished and unfinished beads


Posey (18CH281): General Site Map (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

General site map


Posey (18CH281): Glass Bottle Base (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Glass bottle base


Posey (18CH281): Gunflint (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Gunflint


Posey (18CH281): Iron Knife (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Iron knife


Posey (18CH281): LE Pipe (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: LE pipe


Posey (18CH281): Lead Button (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Lead button


Posey (18CH281): Lead Shot and Musket Ball (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Lead shot and musket ball


Posey (18CH281): Nails (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Nails


Posey (18CH281): Painted Glass Button (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Painted glass button


Posey (18CH281): Pipes (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Pipes


Posey (18CH281): Possible Gun Part (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Possible gun part


Posey (18CH281): Projectile Points (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Projectile points


Posey (18CH281): Quartz Points (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Two quartz points


Post Emancipation Material Culture and Housing on St. Kitts, West Indies (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Todd H. Ahlman.

The post emancipation period in the British Caribbean (post-1834) represented a drastic change for the formerly enslaved Africans on St. Kitts’ sugar plantations as they faced new challenges in their freedom.  This paper presents ceramic and housing data from two structures occupied from the late seventeenth century until the 1850s. Focusing on the period 1800 to 1850, ceramic types and frequencies indicate changes in the acquisition of European ceramics from the era of slavery to the post...


Post-1800 Mining Camps, Redux: A Reappraisal at Age 50 (2016)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Paul White.

Mining camps are certainly a minor one of the kinds of historic sites with which we are occasionally concerned. So began Franklin Fenenga’s prospectus for an archaeology of mining that appeared in the inaugural issue of our journal in 1967. Fenenga went on to identify areas where archaeology stood to make notable contributions and topics where archaeological attention promised only limited yields. Investigations of the mining industry had been sporadic at the time of Fenenga’s article, but...


A Post-Archaic Public Structure on the Middle St. Johns River, Florida? A First Look at the Evidence (2019)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Asa Randall.

This is an abstract from the "SAA 2019: General Sessions" session, at the 84th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. One of the more vexing issues facing archaeologists working in the middle St. Johns River valley of northeast Florida is a general lack of architectural evidence for public or private structures. Evidence for landscape terraforming abounds in the form of earthen and shell mounds built for ceremonial or mortuary purposes. Yet, there is little discrete evidence...


Post-Construction Chinese Worker Housing on the Central Pacific Railroad: 1870-1900 (2017)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Michael Polk.

The construction of the first Transcontinental Railroad in the world, from Omaha, Nebraska, to Sacramento, California, was one fraught with difficulties, involving tens of thousands of workers. When it was completed in May 1869, the Central Pacific Railroad (CPRR) portion of the line, between Ogden, Utah and Sacramento, California, retained many ethnic Chinese workers for operations and maintenance work. Housing for workers during construction was not consistent, however after construction the...


Post-Emancipation African American Life in the Upper South and South Louisiana: insights from a comparison of material culture from the Hermitage, Tennessee, and Alma and Riverlake Plantations, Louisiana (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only David Palmer.

The DAACS (Digital Archaeological Archive of Comparative Slavery) database also includes data relevant to post-Emancipation, including Jim Crow era life of African Americans. DAACS facilitates comparative research, expanding the scale of archaeological inquiry. Through the use of DAACS, post-Emancipation assemblages from the Hermitage site in Tennessee were compared with those from Alma and Riverlake sugar plantation sites in southern Louisiana. Evidence of shared economic strategies related to...


Post-Industrial Placemaking: The Keweenaw Time Traveler and Community-Engaged Historical GIS (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Sarah Fayen Scarlett. Don Lafrenier. John Arnold.

Placemaking in post-industrial communities often becomes contested due to issues of conflicting memory, lack of economic resources, collective mistrust, and the problems of environmental degradation. A historical spatial data infrastructure known as the Keweenaw Time Traveler offers an interactive public-participatory platform to promote the health, both cultural and economic, of Michigan’s remote post-industrial mining region. This online GIS-based historical atlas breaks down traditional...


Post/Mining Heritage Landscapes and the Energy Transition: Digital Tech for Heritage-led, Community-driven Design Thinking. (2020)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Timothy Scarlett.

This is an abstract from the session entitled "Digital Technologies and Public Archaeology" , at the 2020 annual meeting of the Society for Historical Archaeology. Thousands of post-mining communities struggle with recession, de-population, and ecological contamination. Community leaders work against oppressive odds to balance economic revitalization, environmental remediation, and cultural renewal. Mining ruins and landscapes are complex anchors of local heritage. Our research team has...


Postindustrial Archaeology in the Workshop of the World: Philadelphia Industrial Sites, 1990-Present (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Lauren J. Cook.

Nearly all industrial archaeology is postindustrial. Physical and spatial organization of industry has historically changed rapidly enough that we seldom find industrial sites and structures in use by the same firms, for the same purposes, or even in the same industries, for more than a century. Once known as the "Workshop of the World," Philadelphia maintained a varied industrial base after the Civil War.  Physical decay, deferred maintenance, and the pressures of development all take their...


Postindustrial Places and "Big Data": Exploiting the Potential of Historical Spatial Data Infrastructures for Archaeology (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Daniel J Trepal. Don Lafrenier.

This paper discusses the ways in which emerging "Big Data" approaches to historical research, in the form of GIS-based Historical Spatial Data Infrastructures (HSDIs), represent a powerful way urban and industrial archaeologists may better exploit historical source material. GIS-based research remains an underutilized asset within historical archaeology and its subfields. Drawing examples from HSDIs covering two postindustrial places (the city of London, Ontario and the Keweenaw Peninsula, in...


Postmolds in the Forest: A Preliminary Report on Site 16VN3504 (2024)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Gloria Church. Erlend Johnson. Mark Rees.

This is an abstract from the "*SE The New Normal: Approaches to Studying, Documenting, and Mitigating Climate Change Impacts to Archaeological Sites" session, at the 89th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. Data recovery excavations were conducted in the summer of 2023 at two sites in Vernon Parish, Louisiana, as part of hurricane recovery efforts in the Calcasieu Ranger District of Kisatchie National Forest. This poster presents preliminary results from 16VN3504, a...


Pot Souls and Kill Holes: Weeden Island Ceramics from Palmetto Mound, Florida (2018)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Mark Donop.

Most of the ceramic vessels interred in Palmetto Mound (8LV2), were "killed" for reasons that are not adequately explained. These include biomorphic ceramic effigy vessels that depict or embody living things, or their characteristics. Using ethnohistorical and archaeological data, I suggest that the ceramics vessels in Palmetto Mound were considered to be animate, non-human persons with souls that were ritually killed, dismembered, and interred in the mound.