Of Housepits and Homes: 21st Century Perspectives on Houses and Settlements in the Columbia-Fraser Plateau Past - Supplemental Materials
This collection houses the supplemental materials and color figures for chapters associated with the Of Housepits and Homes edited volume.
The Columbia-Fraser Plateau is perhaps most well-known for its robust history of archaeological inquiry into past houses, residences, and domiciles. Numerous excavations were conducted between the 1950s and 1980s as a part of the mitigation process associated with dam building and other development. Many of those excavations centered on examining the remains of past houses and residential sites. Since then, the focus of archaeological inquiry has shifted and splintered across the region. This volume aims to re-kindle and re-vitalize those conversations with new data, new analyses, and contemporary methodological and theoretical approaches. The studies and essays presented here dive deeper into dwellings by bringing together diverse voices to discuss and synthesize the inter- and intra-household record of the Columbia-Fraser Plateau.
Site Type Keywords
Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex •
Domestic Structures •
Pit House / Earth Lodge
Geographic Keywords
United States of America (Country) •
Washington (State / Territory) •
North America (Continent) •
USA (Country)
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-6 of 6)
- Images (6)
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Carney, Brown, and Wallen - Figure 1 (2020)
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Figure 1. Map of the greater North American Northwest, with the Columbia-Plateau region shaded in grey. Numbers correspond with chapters and indicate approximate locations of case studies within the volume. 3. Gingko State Park Project, WA; Johnson, Lubinski, and Hackenberger 4. Lower John Day River, OR; Endzweig 5. Central Columbia Plateau, BC, ID, OR, & WA; Carney 6. Upper and Middle Columbia River, WA; Brown and Hackenberger 7. Wells Dam Reservoir, WA; Rorabaugh 8. Clearwater River, ID;...
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Hampton and Prentiss - Supplemental Figure 1 (2020)
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Supplemental Figure 1. Change in Obsidian Debitage Locations (Floors IIa-IIf) - red: debitage present on later floor, blue: debitage present on earlier floor. Feature base map by Ethan Ryan. Ashley Hampton and Anna Marie Prentiss, Manifesting Membership: Understanding Change in Feature Location and Lithic Spatial Patterns within Housepit 54, Bridge River site, British Columbia
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Hampton and Prentiss - Supplemental Figure 2 (2020)
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Supplemental Figure 2. Change in Jasper Debitage Locations (Floors IIa-IIf) - red: debitage present on later floor, blue: debitage present on earlier floor. Feature base map by Ethan Ryan. Ashley Hampton and Anna Marie Prentiss, Manifesting Membership: Understanding Change in Feature Location and Lithic Spatial Patterns within Housepit 54, Bridge River site, British Columbia.
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Rorabaugh - Figure 1 (2020)
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Figure 1. Wells Dam Project Area and Referenced Locations Rorabaugh, Adam N. 2020 A Critical Reassessment of the Chronology of the Wells Dam Project Area: 9,000 Years of Continuity on the Upper-Middle Columbia River. In Of Housepits and Homes: Of Housepits and Homes: 21st Century Perspectives on Houses and Settlements in the Columbia-Fraser Plateau Past. Edited by Molly Carney, James W. Brown, and Dakota E. Wallen, pp. Journal of Northwest Anthropology Memoir 20, Richland, WA.
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Rorabaugh - Figure 3 (2020)
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Figure 3. Terrace Surfaces in Wells Reservoir Area (Adapted from Chatters 1986: 46-47). Rorabaugh, Adam N. 2020 A Critical Reassessment of the Chronology of the Wells Dam Project Area: 9,000 Years of Continuity on the Upper-Middle Columbia River. In Of Housepits and Homes: Of Housepits and Homes: 21st Century Perspectives on Houses and Settlements in the Columbia-Fraser Plateau Past. Edited by Molly Carney, James W. Brown, and Dakota E. Wallen, pp. Journal of Northwest Anthropology Memoir...
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Rorabaugh - Figure 9 (2020)
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Figure 9. Previously Recorded Habitation Features on Cassimer Bar and Terraces on Pre-inundation 1954 Historic Aerial. Rorabaugh, Adam N. 2020 A Critical Reassessment of the Chronology of the Wells Dam Project Area: 9,000 Years of Continuity on the Upper-Middle Columbia River. In Of Housepits and Homes: Of Housepits and Homes: 21st Century Perspectives on Houses and Settlements in the Columbia-Fraser Plateau Past. Edited by Molly Carney, James W. Brown, and Dakota E. Wallen, pp. Journal of...