The Pequop Projectile Point Type Site in Goshute Valley, Northeastern Nevada and Implications for the Long and Short Chronology Debate in the Great Basin
Author(s): Edward Stoner; Geoffrey Cunnar
Year: 2018
Summary
In a 1995 study of the chronological patterning of Elko Series and Split-stemmed projectile points, Bryan Hockett concluded that neither type entirely matches the patterns of the Bonneville or Lahontan Basins; and the neither area represents good chronological analogues for northeastern Nevada. Dart points recently found in the well dated context of a stratified open site in the northern Goshute Valley exhibit characteristics of both early side-notched and corner-notched types. Comparison of these points those found in Early Archaic contexts in the Bonneville Basin and other regions suggest that many of them may have been routinely misidentified as Elko Series points and not an earlier transitional point type. In this paper, we propose a new temporally diagnostic projectile point type and explore the implications that the identification of what we term "Pequop points" may have on the refinement of Great Basin chronology and on the Long and Short debate.
Cite this Record
The Pequop Projectile Point Type Site in Goshute Valley, Northeastern Nevada and Implications for the Long and Short Chronology Debate in the Great Basin. Edward Stoner, Geoffrey Cunnar. Presented at The 82nd Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Washington, DC. 2018 ( tDAR id: 443206)
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Keywords
General
Chronology
•
Lithic Analysis
•
Typology
Geographic Keywords
North America: California and Great Basin
Spatial Coverage
min long: -124.189; min lat: 31.803 ; max long: -105.469; max lat: 43.58 ;
Record Identifiers
Abstract Id(s): 22632