Basketmaker III (Temporal Keyword)

4,526-4,550 (4,629 Records)

Map #69, Site 5MT10631, Pithouse 101-102-114, Surface 1, Artifacts and Samples (2019)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Jim deVos

Site 5MT10631, Pithouse 101-102-114, Surface 1, Artifacts and Samples


Map #70, Site 5MT10631, Pithouse 101-102-114, Surface 1, Features (2019)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Jim deVos

Site 5MT10631, Pithouse 101-102-114, Surface 1, Features


Map #71, Site 5MT10631, Pithouse 101-102-114 and Nonstructure 113, Stratigraphic Profile (2019)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Jim deVos

Site 5MT10631, Pithouse 101-102-114 and Nonstructure 113, Stratigraphic Profile


Map #72, Site 5MT10631, Topography (2019)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Jim deVos

Site 5MT10631, Topography


Maps (1985)
DATASET Uploaded by: Jesse Clark

A small percentage of the maps reproduced from field data can be found in the series of published DAP reports, but a much larger collection of original material can be accessed via the Anasazi Heritage Center, Colorado. The maps dataset allows users to easily know what maps are available for any provenience. Maps were sequentially numbered within each site and later classified as one of 47 taxa, according to the type of information the map was meant to convey. Documenting the contents of a site...


A Model for Transferring Legacy Datasets to Living Documents: A Case Study Using A GIS Geodatabase for Archiving (2012)
DOCUMENT Full-Text David M. Plaza.

Archaeology is faced with the inherent problem of managing legacy datasets. Often these datasets are in a state of disrepair, thus rendering them almost useless and difficult to properly archive or to integrate into the current archaeological dialogue. Unfortunately, this is a common issue and there is not much literature on the subject. To address this dilemma, an examination of the condition of the paper documents of a legacy dataset is needed. In this research, I will review the preservation...


Mueller Little House
PROJECT Uploaded by: Jim deVos

This project details work by the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center (Crow Canyon) during the Basketmaker Communities Project, a multi-faceted research and public education archaeological initiative undertaken by Crow Canyon from 2011 through 2017. Specifically, this project details work completed at Mueller Little House, a habitation site dating to the Basketmaker III and Pueblo II periods. This project contains maps, photos, and associated logs explaining what is depicted on each image.


Museum of New Mexico Site Survey Form (Redacted) (1966)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Cynthia Irwin-Williams.

Site Records from the Anasazi Origins Project (Museum of New Mexico Site Survey Form).


Nellis Air Force Base: Final Report, Section 110 Archaeological Survey, Area II, Clark County Nevada (2018)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Lisa M. Smith.

The Area II survey conducted by SWCA resulted in the documentation of 50 archaeological sites and 78 isolated finds. Sixteen of the archaeological sites were newly discovered, and of the 44 previously documented sites, 33 were found and reinvestigated. The archaeological sites included 15 prehistoric/ethnographic sites associated with Native Americans, 32 historic sites potentially associated with Euro‐Americans, and 3 multi‐component sites with prehistoric/ethnohistoric and historic components....


New Methods for Understanding the Southwest Archaic: A Density Dependent Approach to Prehistoric Behavior (1980)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Cynthia Irwin-Williams. Pat Hicks. Kenneth Rozen. Nell Ripley.

The nature of the Southwestern Archaic record, reflecting several thousand years of occupation by small mobile foraging groups, provides a crucial methodological and a conceptual dilemma for archaeologists working in the area. At the heart of this dilemma is the relationship between this kind of archaeological record and the concept of the archaeological site, which is central to contemporary thinking. As broadly defined, an archaeological site may be "any place of any size where there are found...


Non-flaked Lithic Tools: Temporal-Spatial Dataset (1985)
DATASET Carl J. Phagan.

The Reductive Technologies Group (RTG) was responsible for supporting the broad research goals of the DAP through the implementation of mid-level research design governing the collection and analysis of data from “artifacts which were manufactured by reductive, or subtractive techniques” (Phagan 1986a:79). The RTG was headed by Roger A. Moore between 1978 and 1979 and by Carl J. Phagan from 1979 to 1985, with the assistance of T. Homer Hruby between 1980 and 1984; supporting work was provided by...


OBAP 1984 LZ0001-0108 Survey Forms (1984)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Sarah Oas

Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1984 LZ0001-0108 Survey Forms


OBAP 1987 LZ0192-0299 Survey Forms (1987)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Sarah Oas

Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1987 LZ0192-0299 Survey Forms


OBAP 1992 LZ0901-0991 Survey Forms (1992)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Sarah Oas

Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1992 LZ0901-0991 Survey Forms


OBAP 1992 Survey Ceramic Tabulation Forms (1992)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Sarah Oas

OBAP 1992 Survey Ceramic Tabulation Forms


OBAP 1992,94 Survey and Excavation Groundstone Tabulation Forms (1994)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Sarah Oas

Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1992 & 1994 Survey and Excavation Groundstone Tabulation Forms


OBAP 1994 LZ1001-1105 Survey Forms (1994)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Sarah Oas

Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1994 LZ1001-1105 Survey Forms


OBAP 1994 Survey Ceramic Tabulation Forms (1994)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Uploaded by: Sarah Oas

Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project 1994 Survey Ceramic Tabulation Forms


OBAP Ceramic Database (2016)
DATASET Keith Kintigh.

Classified ceramics from the Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project, both survey and excavation.


Ojo Bonito Archaeological Project (OBAP)
PROJECT Keith Kintigh. Arizona State University (ASU). Arizona State Parks.

A survey and excavation project directed by Keith Kintigh and executed from 1983 through 1994. Approximate 58km2 were surveyed and 560 sites were recorded. Substantial excavations were undertaken at the Hinkson Site great house complex and Jaralosa Pueblo. Test excavations were completed at H-Spear, a Chacoan Great House located by the project and Ojo Bonito Pueblo. The project took place on the ranch of Mrs. Everett (Mabel) Hinkson (deceased). Most of the project work was done as a part of...


The Oshara Tradition: Origins of Anasazi Cutlure (1973)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Cynthia Iriwin-Williams.

Some of the most intriguing problems in the p re his to r-y of the New World concern the origins and development of the sophisticated sedentary town-dwelling Indians of the Southwestern United States, particularly the Pueblos. Seventy five 'years of extensive research have yielded a considerable amount of infor- matron on the immediate background of these native Pueblo peo- pl es , whose prehistoric representatives archaeologists group under the term Anasazi Culture. However, almost all of this...


Pasquin Site
PROJECT Uploaded by: Jim deVos

This project details work by the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center (Crow Canyon) during the Basketmaker Communities Project, a multi-faceted research and public education archaeological initiative undertaken by Crow Canyon from 2011 through 2017. Specifically, this project details work completed at the Pasquin Site, a habitation site dating from the Basketmaker III through Pueblo III periods. This project contains maps, photos, and associated logs explaining what is depicted on each image.


Patterns of Lithic Use at AZ Q:1:42, Petrified Forest National Park, Arizona: Data Revovery along the Mainline Road (1983)
DOCUMENT Full-Text Anne Trinkle Jones.

During Phase I of the project to reconstruct the Mainline Road (Pkg. 140) at Petrified Forest National Park, a two-component site, AZ Q:1:42, will be disturbed. To mitigate the impacts of the project, staff from the Western Archeological and Conservation Center conducted data recovery in August 1983. The site included four loci, two dated to the Basketmaker III period (A.D. 700 to A.D. 775) and two dated tentatively to the Pueblo II and Early Pueblo III periods (A.D. 950 to A.D. 1150). A large...


Payne Site
PROJECT Uploaded by: Jim deVos

This project details work by the Crow Canyon Archaeological Center (Crow Canyon) during the Basketmaker Communities Project, a multi-faceted research and public education archaeological initiative undertaken by Crow Canyon from 2011 through 2017. Specifically, this project details work completed at the Payne Site, a habitation site dating to the Basketmaker III period. This project contains maps, photos, and associated logs explaining what is depicted on each image.


Photographs (1985)
DATASET Uploaded by: Jesse Clark

Photographs are one of the few remaining ways to examine the now inundated archaeological sites in the DAP. Photographic images add context to specific aspects of Anasazi life in the DAP area; in a sense, DAP photography "provides the investigator with ways to understand the spatial integration of households and communities" (Wilshusen et al. 1999:115). Only a fraction of all photographs taken during the project can be found in the published series of DAP reports. Individuals wishing to access...