Archaeological Reconnaissance of Thirty-Seven Shallow Gradient Geothermal Exploration Holes in the Red Mountain Vicinity, San Bernardino County, California
Author(s): Arnie L. Turner
Year: 1982
Summary
This resource is a citation record only, the Center for Digital Antiquity does not have a copy of this document. The information in this record has been migrated into tDAR from the National Archaeological Database Reports Module (NADB-R) and updated. Most NADB-R records consist of a document citation and other metadata but do not have the documents themselves uploaded.
If you have a digital copy of the document and would like to have it curated in tDAR, please contact us at comments@tdar.org.
Cite this Record
Archaeological Reconnaissance of Thirty-Seven Shallow Gradient Geothermal Exploration Holes in the Red Mountain Vicinity, San Bernardino County, California. Arnie L. Turner. 1982 ( tDAR id: 183559)
Keywords
Material
Chipped Stone
•
Metal
•
Mineral
Site Name
CA-SBR-1008
•
CA-SBR-4937
•
CA-SBR-4939
•
CA-SBR-4940
•
CA-SBR-4941
Investigation Types
Site Evaluation / Testing
General
82-3.2
•
Archaeological Reconnaissance Report
•
Archeological Reconnaissance Report
•
CA-SBR-4938H
•
CA-SBR-4943H
•
Chalcedony
•
Chert
•
Exploration
•
Flaked Lithics
•
Food Processing Sites
•
Lithic Scatters
•
Mining Sites
•
Obsidian
•
Prehistory
•
Quartz
•
Reconnaissance
•
Refuse Disposal Sites
•
Tin Can
Geographic Keywords
06071 (Fips Code)
•
California (State / Territory)
•
Klinker Mountain 7.5' quad
•
Lava Mountains
•
Mojave Desert
•
North America (Continent)
•
Red Mountain 7.5' quad
•
San Bernardino (County)
•
United States of America (Country)
Temporal Keywords
Historic
Spatial Coverage
min long: -117.803; min lat: 33.871 ; max long: -114.131; max lat: 35.809 ;
Individual & Institutional Roles
Sponsor(s): Hunt Energy Corporation
Prepared By(s): Intermountain Research
Record Identifiers
NADB document id number(s): 1061247
NADB citation id number(s): 000000018850
Notes
General Note: Submitted to: Hunt Energy Corporation
General Note: Sent from: Intermountain Research