Homewood's Lot (18AN871) (Site Name Keyword)

26-47 (47 Records)

Homewood's Lot (18AN871): General Site Map (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

General site map


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Iron Fork (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Iron fork


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Key (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Key


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Midden Analysis, Artifact Class in Plow Zone (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Midden analysis chart: Artifact classes in plow zone


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Midden Analysis, Ceramic Types (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Midden analysis chart: Ceramic types


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Midden Analysis, Faunal Refuse by Weight (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Midden analysis chart: Faunal refuse by weight


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Midden Analysis, Midden Map (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Midden location map


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Midden Analysis, Refuse in Weight in Ounces (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Midden analysis chart: Refuse in weight in ounces


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Midden Analysis, White Clay Pipe Bore Diameters (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Midden analysis chart: White clay pipe bore diameters


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Midden Analysis, White Clay Pipe Bore Diameters in Plow Zone (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Midden analysis chart: White clay pipe bore diameters in plow zone


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Midden Analysis, White Clay Pipe Bore Diameters on Total Site (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Midden analysis chart: White clay pipe bore diameters on total site


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Tin-glazed Bowl with Cherry Motif (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Tin-glazed bowl with cherry motif


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Tin-glazed Candlestick (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Tin-glazed candlestick


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Tin-glazed Plate (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Tin-glazed plate


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Tin-glazed Porringer (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Tin-glazed porringer


Homewood's Lot (18AN871): Window Lead Dated 1670 (2004)
IMAGE Catherine Alston.

Representative artifacts: Window lead dated 1670


The Importance of Plow Zone Archaeology (2004)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Julia King.

In the last 25 years, a number of studies have emerged demonstrating that, while vertical stratigraphy is indeed destroyed by plowing, the horizontal or spatial distribution of materials is affected only minimally. Artifacts recovered from plow zone contexts are usually found close to where they were both used and discarded, with important implications for examining the spatial layout of archaeological sites. Distributions of plow zone artifacts and soil chemicals have been used to identify room...


Locally-Made Tobacco Pipes in the Colonial Chesapeake (2005)
DOCUMENT Full-Text C. Jane Cox. Al Luckenbach. Dave Gadsby. Shawn Sharpe.

Tobacco pipes made in the colonial Chesapeake are often referred to as “terra-cotta” pipes. Made of local clays, they often exhibit a brown, reddish, earthen color, though they also come in a fascinating array of colors from orange to pink to almost pure white. These New World products have been fascinating Tidewater archaeologists for decades. Who in colonial society most likely produced and used terra-cotta pipes has been an ongoing discussion for over three decades. Theories have...


Measuring the Advent of Gentility (2005)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Dennis J. Pogue.

My own long-term interest has been to trace the process by which English cultural norms were adapted to New World conditions, to provide insight into why that adaptation occurred, and to assess the role of material culture in effecting that change. As such these are the kinds of questions that have been in the air at least since the 1970s, but which require a rich corpus of comparative and regionally representative evidence in order for archaeologists to have any hope of success in answering...


Midden Analysis Charts from Homewood's Lot (2004)
DOCUMENT Citation Only Catherine Alston.

Midden analysis charts produced for the Comparative Archaeological Study of Colonial Chesapeake Culture project


Notions of Comfort in the Early Colonial Chesapeake (2005)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Philip Levy. John Coombs. David Muraca.

In previous papers we have sought to use archaeological data to rethink some of the reigning assumptions about life in colonial Chesapeake, and move toward a new vision of an early colonial Virginia “frontier.” Our work has focused principally on a few sites in the Virginia tidewater and along the upper reaches of the Rappahannock spanning the years between 1640 and 1760. Last year, for example, we used the artifactual and architectural data from a circa 1690 Rappahannock plantation to argue...


On Living and Dying in the Colonial Chesapeake (2005)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Catherine Alston.

A group of scholars interested in the daily lives and social and cultural relationships of the inhabitants of the Colonial Chesapeake developed the project A Comparative Archaeological Study of Colonial Chesapeake Culture, funded in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Beginning in the fall of 2003 we began collecting information from 18 rural 17th to 18th century archaeological sites in Maryland and Virginia into digital form....