Hell Gap (Other Keyword)

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The Arizona Paleoindian Projectile Point Survey
PROJECT Uploaded by: Saul L. Hedquist

The Arizona Paleoindian Projectile Point Survey is a long-term project to document known occurrences of Paleoindian and Paleoarchaic-age projectile points throughout the state of Arizona by drawing upon public outreach, voluntary disclosure, and the results of published research. Of particular interest are public and private artifact collections containing projectile point types dating between roughly 11,500 and 8,000 radiocarbon years before present. These include fluted Paleoindian point types...


The Arizona Paleoindian Projectile Point Survey - Database (2011)
GEOSPATIAL Saul L. Hedquist.

Database for the Arizona Paleoindian Projectile Point Survey


The Arizona Paleoindian Projectile Point Survey - Database References (2011)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Saul L. Hedquist.

References for the Arizona Paleoindian Projectile Point Survey Database


The Arizona Paleoindian Projectile Point Survey - Poster (2011)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Saul L. Hedquist. Mary M. Praciunas. Jesse Ballenger. D. Shane Miller. Cherie Freeman.

The Arizona Paleoindian Projectile Point Survey is a long-term project to document known occurrences of Paleoindian and Paleoarchaic-age projectile points throughout the state of Arizona by drawing upon public outreach, voluntary disclosure, and the results of published research. Of particular interest are public and private artifact collections containing projectile point types dating between roughly 11,500 and 8,000 radiocarbon years before present. These include fluted Paleoindian point types...


The Jones-Miller Legacy Collection: Reexamining the 10,800 Year Old Bison Butchery Site (2024)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Amy Gillaspie. Steve Nash. Natalie Patton. Magen Hodapp. Chrissina Burke.

This is an abstract from the "SAA 2024: Individual Abstracts" session, at the 89th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. The Jones-Miller Site, located in the eastern Colorado tri-state area, was excavated in the mid-1970s. The Hell Gap complex site has been credited as the only bison butchery site of its kind and size in Colorado, yielding 41,000 Bison antiquus bones, 200 stone tools, 11,000 pieces of debitage, and hundreds of liters of soil samples. In 2017, the...