Ainu Bay 1 (Site Name Keyword)
1-9 (9 Records)
Field sketches and GPS data-based maps.
Ainu Bay 1 Site Photographs from 2008 visit (Fitzhugh) (2008)
Ainu Bay 1 Site Photographs from 2008 visit (Fitzhugh). Annotations are in the "Previous filename" field.
Ainu Bay 2007 Stratigraphic Profile (2007)
Ainu Bay 2007 Stratigraphic Profile
Ainu Bay Profiles (2006)
Ainu Bay Profiles
KBP 2007 Survey Field Notes (2007)
KBP 2007Survey Field Notes from Matt Walsh.
KBP Archaeological and Geological Profile Correlations (2010)
Tephra and radiocarbon date correlations between geologic sections and archaeological profiles from all 3 years of fieldwork in the Kuril Islands during the KBP.
Kuril Biocomplexity Project Archive (NSF 0508109)
A broadly interdisciplinary, international team investigated the complex web of cultural, ecological, geological, and climate systems in the Kuril Islands. The Kurils provide uniquely laboratory-like conditions for this study, permitting examination of past changes in local climates and ecosystems along an island chain. The islands are situated along a latitudinal gradient extending from temperate Hokkaido Island (north of Japan) to subarctic Kamchatka Peninsula of Russia. Evidence of human...
REPORT OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL FIELD RESEARCH IN 2006, INCLUDING GEOLOGICAL DESCRIPTIONS OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL LOCALES [Redacted]. (2007)
This report documents the archaeological field results from the 2006 expedition to the Kurils. This expedition was sponsored by the Sakhalin Regional Museum under the direction of Dr. Tatiana Roon. Dr. Valery O. Shubin of the Sakhalin Regional Museum, served as expedition chief and lead Russian archaeologist. Dr. Ben Fitzhugh is the international director of the Kuril Biocomplexity Project and lead American archaeologist. Dr. Tetsuya Amano served as lead Japanese archaeologist.
Site and excavation forms (2007 Fieldwork) (2007)
This pdf file is a compilation of survey and excavation forms from the 2007 field season of KBP. Survey forms describe the new sites found and the testing performed. Excavation forms describe the test excavations performed at Ainu Bay1, Ainu Creek, Drobnyye 1, and Vodopadnaya 2.