An Analysis of Macrobotanical and Pollen Remains from Several Contexts Associated with the Manchester Boarding House
Author(s): Susan Jacobucci
Year: 2006
Summary
Six bulk soil samples and one sample suitable for palynological analysis were submitted to the Fiske Center from a turn-of-the-century tenement boarding house yard in Manchester, New Hampshire. The six soil samples were submitted as pairs of samples taken from both 19th and 20th-century strata in order to examine change in landscape use over time. Macrobotanical analysis found high levels of weedy and ruderal plants in 19th-century context, as well as evidence of low-growing wild fruits such as blueberries, raspberries, and elderberries. Samples from the 20th-century suggested a landscape more carefully managed by humans, while the single pollen sample analyzed complemented this interpretation.
Cite this Record
An Analysis of Macrobotanical and Pollen Remains from Several Contexts Associated with the Manchester Boarding House. Susan Jacobucci. Andrew Fiske Memorial Center for Archaeological Research Cultural Resource Management Study ,42. 2006 ( tDAR id: 368144) ; doi:10.6067/XCV8M044GN
Keywords
Culture
Euroamerican
•
Historic
Material
Macrobotanical
•
Pollen
Site Type
House
Investigation Types
Environment Research
General
Archaeobotanical Analysis
•
Boardinghouse
•
Landscape Evolution
•
Landscape Reconstruction
•
Palynological Analysis
Geographic Keywords
Manchester
•
New Hampshire (State / Territory)
Temporal Keywords
Historic
Temporal Coverage
Calendar Date: 1800 to 1900
Spatial Coverage
min long: -71.497; min lat: 42.973 ; max long: -71.421; max lat: 43.027 ;
Individual & Institutional Roles
Contact(s): Kathleen Wheeler
File Information
Name | Size | Creation Date | Date Uploaded | Access | |
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fiske42_manchesterboardinghs_botanical_pollenocr.pdf | 387.08kb | Oct 10, 2011 3:03:56 PM | Public |