Revising the Community Plan of the Bell Site (47WN9): Processes and Outcomes of GIS Spatial Analysis
Part of the Bell Site (47 WN 009) Spatial Analysis project
Author(s): Heather Walder; Yolona Ngandali
Year: 2015
Summary
A recent reanalysis of the spatial distribution of artifacts from the Bell site (47WN9) near Oshkosh, Wisconsin, provides an updated interpretation of seventeenth and early eighteenth century activities associated with the Grand Village of the Meskwaki in that locale. Although archaeologists now routinely conduct analyses of artifact distributions at the intrasite level, using Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and other mapping technologies to record and visualize spatial data, sometimes even in real-time during excavations, application of GIS methods to older collections are rarer. This case study (1) documents methods used to map feature-associated artifacts and identify spatial patterning, (2) presents new visualizations of artifact distributions at the Bell site, and (3) revises earlier interpretations of the community plan of the site (Behm 1998, 2008). The results demonstrate the importance of continuing to update curation and research strategies for previously collected artifacts and archaeological data, using a method that is widely applicable to other archaeological sites and that makes effective use of existing cultural resources.
Cite this Record
Revising the Community Plan of the Bell Site (47WN9): Processes and Outcomes of GIS Spatial Analysis. Heather Walder, Yolona Ngandali. Wisconsin Archeologist. 96 (1): 5-26. 2015 ( tDAR id: 399334) ; doi:10.6067/XCV8FN17JR
Keywords
Geographic Keywords
Midwest
•
Wisconsin (State / Territory)
Temporal Keywords
Historic
Spatial Coverage
min long: -89.44; min lat: 43.288 ; max long: -87.484; max lat: 44.773 ;
File Information
Name | Size | Creation Date | Date Uploaded | Access | |
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Walder--Ngandali--and-Behm-2015-Bell-Site-GIS.pdf | 4.09mb | Sep 23, 2015 8:35:57 AM | Public |