Byways to the Past: An American Highway Archaeology Symposium

Part of: Society for American Archaeology 84th Annual Meeting, Albuquerque, NM (2019)

This collection contains the abstracts of the papers presented in the session entitled "Byways to the Past: An American Highway Archaeology Symposium," at the 84th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.

Transportation agencies are among the primary sponsors of resource management archaeology in the United States. Millions of public dollars are expended annually on the identification, evaluation and study of archaeological sites ahead of the design and implementation of highway infrastructure. The scope of these projects ranges from very small reconnaissance efforts to massive data recovery excavations, and have produced new and valuable information on an astonishing variety of site types of every prehistoric and historic period. In the over four decades of highway archaeology, CRM practitioners have pioneered and perfected a variety of methodologies and research foci adapted to the demands and opportunities of highway and bridge projects. This symposium will highlight some of the best examples of recent highway archaeology, and address some of the future challenges presented by changes and expansion of highway infrastructure as we strive to save the past for the future.

Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-12 of 12)

  • Documents (12)

Documents
  1. Archaeology Field School Meets Transportation Data Recovery: An Alternative Mitigation at the James W. Hatch Site (36CE544), Centre County, Pennsylvania (2019)
  2. Building Bridges: Federal, State, and Tribal Collaboration on the US 101 Elwha River Bridge Replacement Project, Washington State (2019)
  3. Digging the Tucson–Ajo Highway: Eight Years of Transportation-Funded Archaeology along Arizona State Route 86 and New Perspectives on Eastern Papaguerían Prehistory (2019)
  4. Discovering Buried Pasts: Illinois Transportation Archaeology and the Rediscovery of America's First Native City (2019)
  5. Metamorphosis of the Unique Pueblo III–IV Hokona Site in the El Morro Valley of New Mexico (2019)
  6. NDDOT’s Collaborative Approach to Tribal Involvement during Project Development and Delivery (2019)
  7. Re-discovery of the Jackson Street "Dog’s Nest" in Waterbury, Connecticut: The First-Generation European Immigrant Experience in New England’s Brass City (2019)
  8. Recent Work at the Pueblo del Alamo: Ceramic Production and Exchange in the Lower Salt River Valley (2019)
  9. Refining Archaeological Probability Models: Case Studies from Georgia DOT Systematic Wetland Surveys (2019)
  10. Spiders and Mud Daubers at LA112420, an Early Developmental Pithouse in Sandoval County, NM (2019)
  11. The Stratton Mill Creek Site: Deciphering a Landscape Feature in the Upper Susquehanna River Valley (2019)
  12. Transcending Transects: Research Contexts for a Landscape View of Highway Corridor Archaeology in California. (2019)