CA-HUM-277 (Site Name Keyword)

1-4 (4 Records)

Archaeological Field Examination Sample Unit Record King Range Road Rehabilitation Spanish Ridge Road System, Humboldt County, California (BLM) (1990)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Marlene L. Greenway.

An archaeological field survey report for a proposed road rehabilitation project in the King Range National Conservation Area in southern Humboldt County, California. No new historic or prehistoric cultural properties were identified during this survey, but the previously recorded CA-HUM-277 was observed and staked out to avoid damage during road work.


Archaeology Field Survey Reports Contributed by BLM, Arcata, CA Field Office
PROJECT Uploaded by: Melinda Salisbury

This project includes Archaeology Field Survey Reports contributed by the Bureau of Land Management's, Arcata, California field office.This initial contribution will establish a regional digital archive project whose goal is to accumulate heritage documents, greatly enhancing our ability to preserve historic resources within the North Coast Region.


The Prehistory of Southwestern Humboldt County: A Study of Coastal Archaeological Sites in the King Range National Conservation Area, Humboldt County, California (BLM) (1985)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Valerie Anne Levulett.

A doctoral dissertation investigating coastal shell middens within the King Range National Conservation Area of southwestern Humboldt County, California. This archaeological investigation was designed to identify native settlement-subsistence practices, season of site use, and temporal placement. Sources of data include discussion of environmental, ethnographic, linguistic and archaeological context. Ana lyses of archaeo1ogical site structure, artifacts, marine and terrestrial mammalian fauna,...


The Role of Human Predation in the Structuring of Prehistoric Prey Populations in Northwestern California (BLM) (2008)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Adrian Whitaker.

A doctoral dissertation by Adrian Whitaker. This paper discusses the implications of faunal remains found at nine prehistoric archaeological sites in Humboldt and Mendocino Counties, California for the effects human predation had on populations of mussels, artiodactyls, and sea mammals.