WACC documents 1970-1979

Part of: WACC Publications in Anthropology (organized by date)

WACC documents from archaeological work in national parks, 1970-1979,

Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-6 of 6)

  • Documents (6)

Documents
  • An Anthropological Evaluation of William Keys' Desert Queen Ranch: Joshua Tree National Monument, California (1977)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Patricia Parker Hickman.

    This is a study of the anthropological research value of William Keys' Desert Queen Ranch, an historic site at Joshua Tree National Monument in the southern California Desert. General problems for future research were derived from an analysis of the history of the ranch in its regional context. Documentary records were used to identify networks of interaction at the ranch itself and in the surrounding region, providing a context of social and economic change within which behavior at the ranch...

  • An Archeological Assessment of Canyon de Chelly National Monument (1976)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text James A. McDonald.

    This overview describes the natural environment of Canyon de Chelly National Monument and summarizes the ways in which it has been used by successive populations. A discussion of the ways in which past environmental conditions may have differed from those of the present and the implications of such differences for the inhabitants of the monument is included. A cultural sequence extending from a Basketmaker II occupation at about AD 300 to the modern Navajo occupation is described; the...

  • An Archeological Overview of Redwood National Park (1973)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Michael J. Moratto.

    Compiled here are data gathered during three seasons of fieldwork (1971-1973) in and near Redwood National Park, California. In order to design a program for the preservation and interpretation of the cultural features in Redwood National Park, the National Park Service has sponsored detailed studies of the local history and archeology. The archeological study, based upon three seasons of library research and field reconnaissance, provided the data for this overview. The chapters dealing with...

  • Excavations at Harmony Borax Works (1977)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text George A. Teague. Lynette O. Shenk.

    Archeological work carried out at Harmony Borax Works in Death Valley during the fall of 1976 was prompted by proposed management activities which include stabilization of ruins and replacement of fencing. Harmony Borax Works was the central feature in the opening of Death Valley and the subsequent popularity of the Furnace Creek area. The plant and associated townsite played an important role in Death Valley history.

  • Fifty Years of Archeology in the California Desert: An Archaeological Overview of Joshua Tree National Monument (1975)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text Thomas F. King.

    This overview discusses Joshua Tree National Monument as a physical entity and as a cultural entity, delineating the changes in environment and land use to which it and adjacent regions of the California Desert have been subjected. The author summarizes and evaluates archeological investigations into the area's prehistory, beginning with the Campbells' pioneer efforts. Survey, concentrated in the northwest-central section of the Monument, has dominated research in the overview area, but a few...

  • Lake Mead National Recreation Area: An Ethnographic Overview (1976)
    DOCUMENT Full-Text David E. Ruppert.

    This ethnographic overview of Lake Mead National Recreation Area, which will serve as companion to a forthcoming archeological overview of the area, provides an ethnographic context for future archeological research and for current interpretation. The Recreation Area, which includes land in both Nevada and Arizona, overlaps early Native American ethnic boundaries, as well as modern state borders. Groups whose territories touched upon or fell within current park boundaries include the...