Addendum To an Archaeological Reconnaissance Survey for the Neuse River / Perry Creek Sewer Interceptor Project, Wake County, North Carolina

Author(s): Thomas H. Hargrove

Year: 1987

Summary

In 1986, Archaeological Research Consultants, Inc. (ARC) performed an archaeological reconnaissance survey of proposed sewer line routes along the Neuse River and several tributaries in the vicinity of Raleigh, North Carolina (Hargrove 1986). The City of Raleigh , through its consultants, is preparing an environmental impact statement for the City's proposed Neuse River/ Perry Creek Sewer Interceptor Project. The proposed sewer lines cross the Neuse River floodplain from Richland Creek in the north to Crabtree Creek in the south, as well as the floodplains of Simms Branch, Perry Creek, and Beaverdam Creek .

The primary contractor for the preparation of the environmental impact

statement is Camp Dresser & McKee, Engineers and Environmental Planners, of Raleigh. Camp Dresser & McKee contracted with ARC to perform an archaeological reconnaissance survey of the proposed sewer route. After a

consultation on April 28, 1986 with representatives of the

North Carolina Division of Archives and History, the Division of Environmental Management the City of Raleigh Utilities Department, and Camp Dresser & McKee, ARC proposed a survey plan based on a 25% sample of the routes along Perry Creek, Simms Branch, Beaverdam Creek, and the Neuse

River from Perry Creek to Crabtree Creek (the Neuse River section between Richland Creek and Perry Creek was added in August). Before the fieldwork, the Principal Investigator (Thomas Hargrove) began background research in the site files of the Archaeology Branch of the North Carolina Division of Archives and History, in the State Archives, and in the North Carolina Collection at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In order to survey the heavily

vegetated floodplains, the ARC surveyors used shovel tests spaced at 40 meter intervals (about 120 feet) along selected sections of each of the proposed corridors. The soil from each shovel test was screened through 1/4 inch wire mesh. Instead of a 25% sample, the survey crews actually covered nearly 50% of most of the proposed routes. This greater coverage was partly due to the the predominance of poorly drained soils along many sections of the routes and a low return of sites in these areas. In addition to the ground survey, the Principal Investigator made two canoe trips to examine the entire length of the Neuse River route for signs of historic mills or bridges that might not have appeared on

historic maps of the area. The results of the earlier research and survey appear in an earlier report by Hargrove 1986).

Cite this Record

Addendum To an Archaeological Reconnaissance Survey for the Neuse River / Perry Creek Sewer Interceptor Project, Wake County, North Carolina. Thomas H. Hargrove. Raleigh, NC: Archaeological Research Consultants, Inc. 1987 ( tDAR id: 197295) ; doi:10.6067/XCV898887N

This Resource is Part of the Following Collections

Spatial Coverage

min long: -78.995; min lat: 35.519 ; max long: -78.255; max lat: 36.076 ;

Record Identifiers

NADB document id number(s): 425322

NADB citation id number(s): 000000063286

Notes

General Note: The information in this record has been migrated into tDAR from the National Archaeological Database Reports Module (NADB-R) and updated. The attached digital file was scanned from a copy at the Research Laboratories of Archaeology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. It was uploaded to tDAR with support from the North Carolina Archaeological Council, and is managed by the North Carolina Office of State Archaeology. Please contact the North Carolina Office of State Archaeology (contact below) for access to this digital file.

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Contact(s): North Carolina Office of State Archaeology