American Civil War (Temporal Keyword)
1-25 (54 Records)
"Ditto" (People standing on the escarpment road decline at the end of the north and South San Diego fork roads, view to the east) Second picture.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 22 (1991)
Palmer and Ken B. standing at escarpment decline.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 23 (1991)
Meeting with Rancher C. Hudson in the road near Detroit tank.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 24 (1991)
Iron wagon hub, Detroit Road RS #1.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 25 (1991)
Detroit Tank.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 26 (1991)
"Ditto" (Detroit Tank) Second picture.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 27 (1991)
Artifacts flagged at the San Diego North Fork paraje site LA 80081. view to the west.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 28 (1991)
"Ditto" (Artifacts flagged at the San Diego North Fork paraje site LA 80081. view to the west) Second picture.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 29 (1991)
"Ditto with San Diego Mt. in the background. View Southwest" (Artifacts flagged at the San Diego North Fork paraje site LA 80081.) Third picture.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 30 (1991)
"Ditto" (Artifacts flagged at the San Diego north Fork paraje site LA 80081, San Diego mt. in the background) Fourth picture.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 31 (1991)
"Ditto" (Artifacts flagged at the San Diego north Fork paraje site LA 80081, San Diego mt. in the background) Fifth picture.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 32 (1991)
Los Medanos RS #2, view south.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 33 (1991)
Los Medanos RS #3, view north, dune swale.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 34 (1991)
Los Medanos RS #3.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 35 (1991)
"Ditto" (Los Medanos RS #3) third picture.
1991 Roll 5 Slide 36 (1991)
Muleshoe found on RS #3 of the Los Medanos study area
1995 Ceramic Typology Analysis (1995)
Ceramic typological analysis completed by Patricia Fournier on the ceramic collection from Paraje San Diego.
Applications of LiDAR Imagery at the Beech Grove Confederate Camp, Battle of Mill Springs, Kentucky (2018)
Before any archaeology was conducted at Beech Grove, aerial LiDAR data was acquired, to map known Confederate earthworks, identify earthworks that were not previously known, and otherwise guide the archaeological investigations. The data sets consisted of 22 LiDAR point cloud LAS swath files which produced high accuracy 3D Digital Elevation Model (DEM) with 1.0 foot cell size. The LiDAR data helped identify at least three Civil War fortification features in the northern and eastern portions of...
An Archaeological and Historical Survey of Fort Lee, Prince George County, Virginia: Final Report and Appendices (1985)
An archaeological inventory was conducted by MAAR Associates. Inc. at Fort Lee, Prince George County. Virginia. This study resulted in the identification of 99 prehistoric and historic sites. A total of 3609 acres was examined constituting a 66.7 percent sample of the facility including all area undisturbed by recent military activity. Initial projections of the resource base were largely confirmed, and the use of an environmentally-based sampling strategy was found to be justified. This...
An Archaeological and Historical Survey, Fort Lee (FL1985.001)
An archaeological inventory was conducted by MAAR Associates. Inc. at Fort Lee, Prince George County. Virginia. This study resulted in the identification of 99 prehistoric and historic sites. A total of 3609 acres was examined constituting a 66.7 percent sample of the facility including all area undisturbed by recent military activity. Initial projections of the resource base were largely confirmed, and the use of an environmentally-based sampling strategy was found to be justified. This...
Archaeological Evaluations of Significance, Fort Lee (FL1987.001)
A total of 17 archeological evaluations of significance were completed as part of an ongoing program of cultural resource management at Fort Lee, Prince George County, Virginia. The evaluations were conducted in compliance with the National Historic Preservation Act and its implementing regulations In situations where planned development projects would adversely affect identified archeological resources. Of the 17 properties evaluated during this study, six were classified as significant and for...
Archeological Evaluations of Significance at Fort Lee, Prince George County, Virginia (1987)
A total of 17 archeological evaluations of significance were completed as part of an ongoing program of cultural resource management at Fort Lee, Prince George County, Virginia. The evaluations were conducted in compliance with the National Historic Preservation Act and its implementing regulations In situations where planned development projects would adversely affect identified archeological resources. Of the 17 properties evaluated during this study, six were classified as significant and for...
Artifact Catalog, Archaeological and Historical Survey, Fort Lee (2011)
Aritfact catalog for the archaeological inventory that was conducted by MAAR Associates. Inc. at Fort Lee, Prince George County. Virginia. This study resulted in the identification of 99 prehistoric and historic sites. A total of 3609 acres was examined constituting a 66.7 percent sample of the facility including all area undisturbed by recent military activity. Initial projections of the resource base were largely confirmed, and the use of an environmentally-based sampling strategy was found to...
Artifact Catalog, Archaeological Evaluations of Significance, Fort Lee (2011)
Catalog of artifacts from Archaeological Evaluations of Significance at Fort Lee. A total of 17 archeological evaluations of significance were completed as part of an ongoing program of cultural resource management at Fort Lee, Prince George County, Virginia. The evaluations were conducted in compliance with the National Historic Preservation Act and its implementing regulations In situations where planned development projects would adversely affect identified archeological resources. Of the...
Bold Rascals: The Archaeology of Blockade Running in the Western Gulf (2016)
Archaeological study and historical research have combined to present a detailed picture of blockade running in the western Gulf of Mexico during the American Civil War. From the beginning of the conflict until weeks after Appomattox, the Confederate coastline west of the Mississippi was a hive of blockade-running activity, first with sailing vessels and later with steamships. The wrecks of the paddle steamers Will o’ the Wisp, Acadia, and Denbigh, all dating from the final months of the war,...