Archaeological Investigations Salt River Project, Coronado-Silverking Transmission Line, Sitgreaves National Forest, Navajo County, Arizona: Final Report for Archaeological Survey of Proposed Pulling and Sleeving Locations on the Silverking Line, A77-137

Author(s): William S. Marmaduke; Steven G. Dosh

Year: 1978

Summary

On April 10, 1978, Steve Dosh, archaeologist at the Museum of Northern Arizona, surveyed three sets of pulling sites and one sleeving location in the right-of-way of the Coronado-Silverking Transmission Line in the Sitgreaves National Forest. The Salt River Project transmission line construction staff requested the work, which Dosh did as part of his duties as monitor for the National Forest portion of the Silverking line construction.

Portions of the areas surveyed for the present report were also surveyed earlier during the preliminary right-of-way inventory (Hartman and Kuehn 1978) and the towers and access roads impact survey (Marmaduke et al 1978). No cultural remains were found within those coincident portions during either survey.

Cite this Record

Archaeological Investigations Salt River Project, Coronado-Silverking Transmission Line, Sitgreaves National Forest, Navajo County, Arizona: Final Report for Archaeological Survey of Proposed Pulling and Sleeving Locations on the Silverking Line, A77-137. William S. Marmaduke, Steven G. Dosh. 1978 ( tDAR id: 427927) ; doi:10.6067/XCV8427927

This Resource is Part of the Following Collections

Spatial Coverage

min long: -110.699; min lat: 34.583 ; max long: -110.611; max lat: 34.611 ;

Individual & Institutional Roles

Contact(s): Salt River Project Cultural Resource Manager

Contributor(s): Steven G. Dosh; Donald E. Weaver, Jr.

Prepared By(s): Museum of Northern Arizona, Department of Anthropology

Submitted To(s): Salt River Project

File Information

  Name Size Creation Date Date Uploaded Access
1978_MarmadukeDosh_ArchaeologicalInvestigationsSalt_OCR_PDFA.pdf 2.09mb Apr 10, 1978 Mar 27, 2017 2:13:15 PM Confidential
This file is unredacted.

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Contact(s): Salt River Project Cultural Resource Manager