Archaeological Survey and Investigations Along the McCullough-Davis 230 kV Transmission Line, Granite Reef Aqueduct, Central Arizona Project, Clark County, Nevada and Mohave County, Arizona

Summary

Under contract with the Bureau of Reclamation, the Office of Cultural Resource Management (OCRM), Department of Anthropology, Arizona State University, completed an archaeological survey of the McCullough-Davis 230 kV Transmission Line. The McCullough-Davis 230 kV Transmission Line stretches 61 miles from the McCullough Substation in the Eldorado Valley to Davis Dam on the Colorado River.

Following the survey, OCRM archaeologists conducted archaeological investigations at two sites located along the McCullough-Davis 230 kV Transmission Line to mitigate the adverse effects of disturbance in the project area. Archaeological investigations consisted of surface collection and excavation.

This project presents the survey and mitigation reports that describe the results of archaeological work along the McCullough-Davis 230 kV Transmission Line of the Granite Reef Aqueduct. The investigations identified a pattern of secondary resource zone exploitation in the desert areas between the river valleys. Researchers defined and described a secondary resource zone as an area which did not support a permanent population, but was utilized intermittently, probably on a seasonal basis, in the exploitation of wild plant and animal food resources by people whose primary subsistence was derived from a different zone.

Cite this Record

Archaeological Survey and Investigations Along the McCullough-Davis 230 kV Transmission Line, Granite Reef Aqueduct, Central Arizona Project, Clark County, Nevada and Mohave County, Arizona. ( tDAR id: 436330) ; doi:10.6067/XCV8Q242DM

Spatial Coverage

min long: -115.084; min lat: 35.434 ; max long: -114.5; max lat: 36.067 ;

Record Identifiers

Granite Reef Aqueduct Task No.(s): 30, 34

Bureau of Reclamation Contract No.(s): 8-07-32-V0039

Source Collections

Collections are held at the Huhugam Heritage Center, Gila River Indian Community, Arizona.

Resources Inside this Project (Viewing 1-2 of 2)

  • Documents (2)

Documents

  1. Archaeological Investigations Along the McCullough-Davis Transmission Line, a Feature of the Granite Reef Aqueduct, Central Arizona Project (1980)
  2. A Cultural Resource Survey of the McCullough-Davis 230 kV Transmission Line, Clark County, Nevada, A Feature of the Granite Reef Transmission System, Central Arizona Project (1979)