LA 86101 (Site Name Keyword)
1-6 (6 Records)
Beginning in January 2003, engineering-environment Management, Inc., (e2M), under contract with Kirtland Air Force Base, conducted a Section 110 cultural resources investigation of 6,654 acres of United States Forest Service (USFS) lands withdrawn to Kirtland Air Force Base (4,824 acres) and the Department of Energy (1,830 acres) located in the Manzanita Mountains of New Mexico (DACA45-03-D-0005). The primary objectives of the survey were to revisit and update previously recorded archaeological...
Cultural Resource Survey for the Robotic Vehicle Range, Sandia National Laboratories, New Mexico (1994)
During March 1994, Advanced Sciences, Inc. (ASI) conducted a cultural resource survey of the area inside the Robotic Vehicle Range (RVR) Facility at Sandia National Laboratories/New Mexico (SNL/NM). Portions of the project area have undergone construction and maintenance disturbance associated with the current 1.76 acre (0.70 ha) headquarters at the existing Robotic Vehicle Range (RVR) facility. An historic homestead (LA 104205) was the only significant cultural resource located within the...
Cultural Resource Survey of 67 Acres within the Base Landfill, for a Proposed Dump Expansion, Kirtland Air Force Base (1993)
Mariah Associates, Inc. completed a Class Ill cultural resource inventory of the sanitary landfill on Kirtland Air Force Base, Bernalillo County, New Mexico. The project encompassed a 67 acre area within the existing landfill boundary. Sanitary refuse from the Base will be deposited and covered with clean fill. Survey took place on June 4, 1993 by John A. Evaskovich and Wendy Jones Poague of Mariah Associates, Inc. One isolated occurrence was recorded during the survey. The isolated occurrence...
Draft Report on the Results of an Archaeological Inventory of 16,090 Acres on Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico Table 1 (2002)
Table 1: List of 497 isolates found during survey.
Historic Land Use Patterns at Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico (2005)
This study examines the historic land use patterns on what is now Kirtland Air Force Base and adjacent lands withdrawn from public use on the Cibola National Forest. The study summarizes prehistoric Native American, Spanish Colonial, and early American land use, while focusing on late Territorial (post 1880) homesteading, mining, and suburban development on this portion of the East Mesa located southeast of the city of Albuquerque.
Kirtland Air Force Base Project Metadata
Project metadata for resources within the Kirtland Air Force Base cultural heritage resources collection.