1,783 results on '"Ground Stone"'
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2. معرفی و طبقهبندي ادوات سنگیِ دورة شوشان میانه محوطه تل چگاسفل.
- Author
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دحدوح عبدالوهاب, عباس مقدم, and نصیر اسکندري
- Abstract
The Middle Susiana period in southwestern Iran has several characteristics, the most important of which are the development of agriculture and animal husbandry alongside growing numbers of settlements and increasing population densities. As agricultural practices expanded, the increased use of ground stone to plow fields, harvest and process crops was inevitable. Many examples of these implements have already been identified at Neolithic sites in the Deh Luran Plain and across Khuzestan. The Zohreh plain in southeastern Khuzestan province has a high agricultural capacity. Hundreds of ground stones have been discovered in the site of Tol-Chega Sofla, which is located in the riverine landscape of the Zohreh Plain, which gave us the opportunity to study them in terms of their typology and function in the subsistence economy of the fifth millennium BCE. By classifying and comparing the stone tools of Chega Sofla with other examples discovered in Deh Luran and Susiana plains, it has become clear that these ground stone tools are similarly used in communities for agriculture, weaving and hunting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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3. Using X‐ray fluorescence to examine ancient Maya granite ground stone in Belize.
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Tibbits, Tawny L. B., Peuramaki‐Brown, Meaghan M., Brouwer Burg, Marieka, Tibbits, Matthew A., and Harrison‐Buck, Eleanor
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MAYAS , *STONE , *GRANITE , *PETROGRAPHIC microscope , *INHOMOGENEOUS materials , *X-ray fluorescence , *LASER ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry - Abstract
While ubiquitous among ancient Maya sites in Mesoamerica, archaeological analysts frequently overlook the interpretive potential of ground stone tools. The ancient Maya often made these heavy, bulky tools of coarse‐grained, heterogeneous materials that are difficult to chemically source, unlike obsidian. This paper describes an application of handheld, energy‐dispersive X‐ray fluorescence (XRF) to provenance ground stone artifacts (tools and architectural blocks) composed of granite: a nonhomogenous, phaneritic stone. We present a multicomponent methodology that independently tested whole‐rock, thin‐sectioned, and powdered samples by petrographic microscope, conventional, lab‐based XRF, and portable XRF units, which yielded comparable results. After establishing distinct geochemical signatures for the three geographically restricted granite plutons in Belize, we devised a field‐based XRF application on a whole rock that could replicate the compositional readings of lab‐based XRF on powdered materials with sufficient accuracy and reliability. We applied this multishot XRF technique to granite ground stone items from a range of ancient Maya sites throughout Belize; we discuss two specific case studies herein. Our results underscore the widespread potential of multishot XRF applications for determining the provenance of coarse‐grained, heterogeneous rock materials. These results can help push the boundaries from one‐dimensional, functional explanations of ground stone items to their social and ideological dimensions, alongside deeper understandings of granite resource management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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4. THE 2015-2017 EXCAVATIONS AT THE CHALCOLITHIC SITE OF CHLORAKAS-PALLOURES ON CYPRUS.
- Author
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Düring, Bleda S., Klinkenberg, Victor, Souter, Ellon, Croft, Paul, and Gamble, Michelle
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RAW materials , *FIGURINES - Abstract
From 2015 to 2017 the first three excavation seasons took place at Chlorakas-Palloures, a Chalcolithic site in western Cyprus. Here we present the site stratigraphy, and the structures and burials, excavated at the site. We also introduce the ground stone, figurines and chipped stone found during these first seasons. We also introduce the ground stone, figurines, and chipped stone found during these first seasons. We discuss the raw materials used, the formal and informal tool types, and the context in which these objects were found, as well as how they fit into the broader knowledge of the period. Finally we present the faunal evidence. The aim is to provide colleagues with a first assessment of our results rather than a final report. Not all our assemblages have been fully processed, and inevitably our interpretations of the site and its assemblages will change in future seasons, as we excavate additional trenches and analyse further assemblages. Nonetheless we feel that our data are providing a siginificant addition to our knowledge of Chalcolithic Cyprus that should therefore be published in this interim report. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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5. Ancient Maya Embedded Economies and Changing Ground Stone Densities in Households at Actuncan, Belize.
- Author
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LeCount, Lisa J., Blitz, John H., and Tidwell, Jonathan W.
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STONE , *POTTERY , *PETROLOGY , *NUCLEAR activation analysis , *CLAY - Abstract
In embedded economies where multiple modes of production and exchange exist, artifact distributions in households alone do not reflect the strength of specific modes. We use a diachronic perspective tied to changes in political economies and artifact class densities standardized by excavation volume at the Maya site of Actuncan, Belize, to elucidate changes in the strength of individual production and exchange modes in the Preclassic and Classic periods. We focus on ground stone densities as a measure of grinding intensity across elite and common households. Data indicate that common households always ground more maize than elites, but intensity peaked in the Late Classic when tax and tribute demands and market exchanges were greatest. In the Terminal Classic, common household grinding intensity decreased by half as tribute burdens diminished, illustrating the impact of political hierarchies on household economies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. Tool-use experiments to determine the function of an incised ground stone artefact with potential symbolic significance
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Elspeth Hayes, Caroline Spry, Richard Fullagar, Anna Tuechler, Petra Schell, and Megan Goulding
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microwear ,use-wear ,residues ,incised stone ,southwestern australia ,holocene ,stone tool technology ,ground stone ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
Ground stone implements are found across most Australian landscapes and are often regarded as Aboriginal tools that were used for processing or modifying other items such as plant foods, plant fibres, resins, bone points, pigments and ground-stone axes and knives. Less common are ground stones modified for non-utilitarian, symbolic purposes; for example, polished and carved stone ornaments; ritual implements such as cylcons and tjuringa sacred stones; and unused, well-crafted ground-stone axes. In this paper, we report on the function and potential significance of an unusual ground stone artefact from a site near Bannockburn, southwestern Australia. A set of regularly spaced, shallow grooves has been cut into the surface of each side of the stone. Use-wear, residues and experimental replica tools indicate that the grooves were probably made with a stone flake and then used to shape or sharpen wooden implements such as spear points or the edges of boomerangs or other weapons. The microscopic wear outside the grooves indicates contact with soft wood or other plant material, possibly a soft plant fibre bag. We suggest that the Bannockburn artefact primarily functioned as a woodworking tool, but the even spacing of the incisions suggests that they were intentionally placed, perhaps to convey a special meaning, perhaps as a tally system or other form of communication.
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- 2020
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7. Maize Dependence among the Sevier Puebloans.
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COULAM, NANCY J.
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PUEBLO peoples (North American peoples) , *CORN , *TYPHA , *ARCHAEOLOGISTS , *MARSHES - Abstract
Some archaeologists have argued that the Formative-era villagers of the Sevier River region in the eastern Great Basin were primarily foragers whose economy was dependent upon marsh resources, especially cattails. This paper compiles multiple lines of evidence from Backhoe Village and other Sevier villages to show that subsistence was based on maize agriculture, not foraging for wild resources. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. The Poetics of Annihilation: On the Presence of Women and Children at Massacre Sites in the Ancient Southwest
- Author
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Osterholtz, Anna J., Martin, Debra L., Martin, Debra L., Series editor, and Tegtmeyer, Caryn, editor
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- 2017
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9. Ground Stone
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Kipfer, Barbara Ann
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- 2021
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10. Detecting exchange networks in New Britain, Papua New Guinea: geochemical comparisons between axe‐adze blades and in situ volcanic rock sources.
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PENGILLEY, ALANA, BRAND, CHRISTABEL, FLEXNER, JAMES, SPECHT, JIM, and TORRENCE, ROBIN
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VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc. , *ANALYTICAL geochemistry , *SOCIAL interaction - Abstract
Compared to elsewhere in Oceania, the history and character of stone axe‐adze production and exchange in the Bismarck Archipelago is very poorly known. To explore the feasibility of using geochemical analysis to trace past social interaction, we conducted a non‐destructive portable XRF study of 97 ground stone artefacts from archaeological contexts in New Britain and the ethnographic collection at the Australian Museum. The study capitalised on the well‐documented spatial distribution of geochemical variation resulting from the plate‐tectonic history of the region. The results indicate that prehistoric communities in New Britain specialised in goods such as ground stone tools or obsidian in order to facilitate social interaction over a large region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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11. RESIDUE ANALYSIS OF GRINDING STONES FROM CHALCOLITHIC GÜLPINAR.
- Author
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BAMYACI, Abdulvahap Onur
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COPPER Age , *GRINDING & polishing , *RADIOCARBON dating , *EXCAVATION , *GAS chromatography/Mass spectrometry (GC-MS) - Abstract
This study presents the preliminary results of residue analysis of grinding stones recovered from the Early Chalcolithic 2 and Middle Chalcolithic period settlements (Gülpınar II and Gülpınar III) in the Sanctuary of Apollo Smintheus (Smintheion), located in the southwestern corner of the modern Biga Peninsula (Ancient Troad) in north-western Anatolia. The Early Chalcolithic 2 period settlement at Gülpınar II has been dated to 5320-4940 BC, while the Middle Chalcolithic period settlement at Gülpınar III superimposing it has radiocarbon dates ranging between 4930 and 4450 BC. Excavations at Chalcolithic Gülpınar between 2004 and 2014 revealed a total of 453 ground stone tools. This work in this context residue analyze of total of 28 grinding stones that were uncovered from these two Early Chalcolithic 2 and Middle Chalcolithic cultural levels. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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12. Variable behavioral and settlement contexts for the emergence of ceramic vessels in eastern Siberia
- Author
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Karisa Terry
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Pleistocene ,Ecology ,Ephemeral key ,Sedentism ,Foraging ,Ground stone ,Subsistence agriculture ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Geography ,Pottery ,Far East ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
The early, ephemeral adoption of pottery arose under different circumstances in both the Transbaikal and Russian Far East regions, however in both instances it was likely used to intensify extraction of more nutrients from resources already heavily in diets focused almost exclusively on riverine environments. In the Transbaikal, earliest ceramic use is correlated to an increase in residential mobility with no other technological or subsistence change. Ceramic vessels may have allowed more extensive processing of these food sources, including small mammals and fish, already in the foraging diet. In the Russian Far East, however, earliest ceramic use is correlated to higher rates of sedentism and ground stone technology, with intensification of land mammals in the Middle Amur Basin, and fish and C3 plant extraction in the Lower Amur Basin. Furthermore, it is clear that early on ceramics were incorporated ephemerally into behavioral systems throughout a relatively long period of time, thus the use of terminology such as “Final Late Paleolithic” and “Initial Neolithic” may only be descriptors of whether individual sites contain pottery, not a meaningful description of “cultures” or “time periods”. Thus, during the late Pleistocene, pottery may have been incorporated by hunter-gatherer-fishers into one behavioral system that initially comprised locations with and without ceramic use depending on the specific behavioral and environmental circumstances of the given region.
- Published
- 2022
13. E822-1471 Drill Form
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Hanrahan, Sean
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Historic ,Middle Archaic ,Fire Cracked Rock ,Stone Drill ,Chipped Stone ,Eaton ,Dating Sample ,Woodland ,PaleoIndian ,Ceramic ,Domestic Structures ,drill form ,Chipped Stone Drills ,Early Archaic ,Archaic ,Late Archaic ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Fauna ,Ground Stone ,Western New York ,Multi-component ,Glass ,Human Remains - Abstract
This file describes the morphology and use wear of a drill form from the Eaton site in West Seneca, New York.
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- 2023
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14. Le Néolithique ancien de la plaine de Nîmes (Gard, France)
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Bellot-Gurlet, Ludovic, Bonnardin, Sandrine, Bouby, Laurent, Bressy-Leandri, Céline, Bruxelles, Laurent, Chevillot, Pascale, Convertini, Fabien, Figueiral, Isabel, Manen, Claire, MARTIN, Sophie, Noret, Christelle, Perrin, Thomas, Séjalon, Pierre, Thirault, Éric, Wattez, Julia, and Archives d'Écologie Préhistorique, AEP
- Subjects
Radiocarbon dating ,Early Neolithic ,Sepulchers ,Économie préhistorique ,stone axe ,micromorphology ,archéozoologie ,ground stone ,industrie lithique ,Néolithique ancien ,Epicardial ,C14 ,fauna ,datation C14 ,spatial organization ,Chronology ,Cultures préhistoriques ,Statistique spatiale ,Sépultures ,chronologie ,unhabitat ,osseous industrie ,pottery ,Céramique ,sílex ,Prehistoric cultures ,Habitat ,parure ,lithic industry ,outillage pol ,archaeozoology ,Jewelry ,Spatial analysis (Statistics) ,industrie osseuse ,Organisation spatiale ,radiocarbone ,Prehistoric economics ,Faune ,flint ,micromorphologie - Abstract
Dans le sud de la France, la connaissance des habitats du Néolithique ancien reste encore assez fragmentaire et le plus souvent limitée à quelques structures, bâtiments ou fragments de bâtiments isolés. Au sud de la ville de Nîmes, dans le Gard, la multiplication des opérations d’archéologie préventive au cours des deux dernières décennies a permis de mettre au jour les vestiges plus ou moins bien conservés de trois sites d’habitats auxquels viennent s’adjoindre une dizaine de structures ou indices de sites isolés. Tous ces gisements se rattachent à l’Épicardial languedocien, entre 5100 et 4800 ans avant notre ère environ. La présence de niveau de sol et de structures en creux permet d’approcher la structuration spatiale de ces habitats. Le mobilier archéologique recueilli (céramique, silex, quartz, macro-outillage, parure, ocre...) documente les productions associées à ce faciès culturel ainsi que leur évolution sur plusieurs siècles. En plus de l’étude des provenances des matériaux, les analyses carpologiques, archéozoologiques, anthracologiques et malacologiques illustrent la manière dont ces gisements s’inscrivent au sein de leur territoire et de leur environnement. Enfin, la multiplication des diagnostics archéologiques et fouilles préventives permet, dans cette zone, de s’assurer de la réalité des vides d’occupation. C’est donc toute la dynamique spatiale et temporelle de l’occupation d’un territoire que ces gisements permettent d’aborder., Evidence for early Neolithic settlements in southern France is still quite fragmentary and is most often limited to a few features or parts of structural remains. South of the town of Nîmes, in the Gard département, the increase in preventive archaeology fieldwork over the last two decades has led to the discovery of three quite well-preserved settlement sites, together with a dozen or so sites with slighter traces of occupation. All these sites date to the Languedoc Epicardial, which approximately covers the period 5100-4800 BC. The preservation of a soil horizon as well as subsoil features on these settlements enables spatial patterning to be examined. The artefacts recovered (pottery, flint, quartz, macrolithic tools, ornaments, ochre...) illustrate Epicardial material culture and its development over several centuries. Combined with sourcing of materials, analyses of botanical, faunal and snail assemblages illustrate how these sites relate to their territory and environment. Lastly, the increase in trial trenching and preventive excavation now makes it possible to determine which parts of the region actually remained unoccupied. These sites thus provide a whole range of evidence enabling the space-time dynamics of settlement to be investigated at a regional scale.
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- 2023
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15. Data Recovery Excavations at 41CR56, 41CR61 and 41CR64 in Crane County, Texas
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AmaTerra Environmental, Inc., Lassen, Robert, and Norment, Aaron
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Late Paleoindian ,Historic ,Site Evaluation / Testing ,Fire Cracked Rock ,Roasting Pit / Oven / Horno ,Late Prehistoric ,Dating Sample ,Lithic cache ,Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex ,Bioarchaeological Research ,Archaeological Overview ,Burial Pit ,41CR61 ,41CR64 ,Shell ,Building Materials ,TxDOT ,Midden ,Mineral ,Stone personal ornaments ,Archaeological Feature ,Middle Archaic ,Chipped Stone ,Metal ,Funerary and Burial Structures or Features ,Prehistoric Site Data Recovery ,PaleoIndian ,Macrobotanical ,Settlements ,Encampment ,Ceramic ,Crane County, Texas ,Research Design / Data Recovery Plan ,Late Archaic ,CRM ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Late Prehistoric of West Texas ,Fauna ,41CR56 ,Ground Stone ,Pit ,Hearth ,Glass ,Human Remains ,Prehistoric Site Testing ,Burned Rock Midden - Abstract
Public version of the project excavation report (see project page for abstract).
- Published
- 2023
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16. Ground Stone Implements
- Author
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Heidi M.C. Dierckx
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Mining engineering ,Ground stone ,Geology - Published
- 2022
17. Advances in Geochemical Sourcing of Granite Ground Stone
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Marieka Brouwer Burg, Eleanor Harrison-Buck, and Tawny L. B. Tibbits
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Archeology ,Ground stone ,Archaeology ,Ancient maya ,Geology - Abstract
Often understudied by archaeologists, ground stone tools (GST) were ubiquitous in the ancient Maya world. Their applications ranged from household tools to ceremonial equipment and beyond. Little attention has been focused on chemically sourcing the raw stone material used in GST production, largely because these tools were fashioned out of igneous or sedimentary rock, which can present characterization challenges. And, although portable X-ray fluorescence (pXRF) has been applied widely to source obsidian, the utility of pXRF for geochemically sourcing other kinds of stone remains underexplored. We present a small-scale application of pXRF for determining granite provenance within a section of the Middle Belize Valley in Belize, Central America. Belize is an ideal location to test chemical sourcing studies of granite because there are only three tightly restricted and chemically distinct sources of granite in the country, from which the overwhelming majority of granite for ancient tool production derived. The method described here demonstrates that successful and accurate geological characterizations can be made on granite GST. This cutting-edge sourcing technique has the potential to be more widely applied in other regions to reveal deeper connections between the sources of GST production and sites of consumption across space and through time.
- Published
- 2021
18. HARBETSUVAN TEPESİ SÜRTME TAŞ ALETLERİ
- Author
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Pınar KAPLAN, Oğuz ŞİMŞEK, and Bahattin ÇELİK
- Subjects
Arkeoloji ,Archaeology ,Harbetsuvan Tepesi ,Neolithic Period ,Ground Stone ,Serpentine ,Basalt ,Neolitik Dönem ,Sürtme Taş ,Serpantin ,Bazalt - Abstract
Recent studies in Southeastern Anatolia shed light on the Pre-Pottery Neolithic Period. The surveys and excavations carried out in Şanlıurfa show that the centers of the Pre-Pottery Neolithic Period are concentrated in this region. Gobekli Tepe, Karahan Hill, Sayburç, Nevali Çori, Ayanlar Höyük, Yeni Mahalle, Harbetsuvan Hill, Sefer Hill, Kurt Hill, Hamzan Hill and Taşlı Hill are some of them. The Harbetsuvan Hill, discovered in 2014, is located within the provincial borders of Şanlıurfa, 53 km east of Şanlıurfa, between the calcareous plateaus known as the Tek Tek Mountains. On the Harbetsuvan Hill, which is dated to the Pre-Pottery Neolithic Period; T-shaped obelisks and architectural remains were unearthed. In addition, a large number of flint tools, grinding stones, pestles, stone vessels, animal bones and various ornaments were found. In our study; Studies were carried out on the ground stone finds found in the salvage excavations carried out in 2017, 2018 and 2019. Ground stone tools vary in size and shape. Some finds were recovered intact. Ground stone tools; pestles, upper and lower grinding stones, axe, chisel, chisel, chisel, slingshot, sharpening stone, drill, stone vessels, decorated stone slabs, marble plug, limestone marbles, basalt hammer, round window stone and shaped by rubbing method. basalt and basalt fragments consist of retouched and inlaid stones., Güneydoğu Anadolu'da son dönemlerde yapılan çalışmalar Çanak Çömleksiz Neolitik Dönem’e ışık tutmaktadır. Şanlıurfa'da gerçekleştirilen Yüzey Araştırmaları ve Kazı Çalışmaları Çanak Çömleksiz Neolitik Dönem’e ait merkezlerin bu bölgede yoğun olduğunu göstermektedir. Göbekli Tepe başta olmak üzere Karahan Tepe, Sayburç, Nevali Çori, Ayanlar Höyük, Şanlıurfa-Yeni Mahalle, Harbetsuvan Tepesi, Sefer Tepe, Kurt Tepesi, Hamzan Tepe ve Taşlı Tepe bunlardan bir kaçıdır. 2014 yılında keşfedilen Harbetsuvan Tepesi Şanlıurfa il sınırları içerisinde Şanlıurfa'nın 53 km doğusunda Tek Tek Dağları olarak bilinen kalkerli platolar arasında yer almaktadır. Çanak Çömleksiz Neolitik Döneme tarihlendirilen Harbetsuvan Tepesi'nde; T-biçimli dikilitaşlar ve mimarı yapı kalıntıları gün yüzüne çıkarılmıştır. Bunun yanı sıra çok sayıda çakmaktaşı alet, öğütme taşları, havanelleri, taş kaplar, hayvan kemiği ve çeşitli süs eşyası gibi buluntular ele geçmiştir. Çalışmamızda; 2017, 2018 ve 2019 yıllarında gerçekleştirilen kurtarma kazılarında ele geçen sürtme taş buluntuları üzerinde incelemeler yapılmıştır. Sürtme taş aletler boyut ve şekil olarak farklılıklar göstermektedir. Bazı buluntular sağlam olarak ele geçmiştir. Sürtme taş aletler; havanelleri, alt ve üst ezgi taşları, balta, keser, kesercik, keskicik, sapan taşları, biley taşı, delici, taş kaplar, bezeli taş plakalar, mermer tıkaç, kireç taşı misketler, bazalt vurgaç, yuvarlak pencere taşı ve sürtme yöntemi ile şekillendirilmiş bazalt ve bazalt parçaları, düzeltili ve işlentili taşlardan oluşmaktadır.
- Published
- 2022
19. Lithic Materials
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Rapp, George, Herrmann, Bernd, editor, Wagner, Günther A., editor, and Rapp, George
- Published
- 2009
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20. Later Stone Age Occupation on Iresi Hills: A New Dated Context in Southwest Nigeria
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Olusegun Akanni Opadeji
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Archeology ,Artifact (archaeology) ,Geography ,Later Stone Age ,Ground stone ,Assemblage (archaeology) ,Context (language use) ,Rainforest ,Pottery ,Archaeology ,West africa - Abstract
The recent investigation of an archaeological site in southwest Nigeria has added new insight into the early human occupation and cultural development in the rainforest of West Africa. In the Iresi Hills, two rockshelters were investigated in 2017 and 2018, and both yielded evidence of Later Stone Age (LSA) occupations. The artifact assemblage reveals two cultural phases—Aceramic LSA and Ceramic LSA. The upper Ceramic LSA phase is characterized by pottery, microliths, ground stone axes, and other lithic finds, while the lower phase bears microliths only. The Ceramic LSA level is dated to 5653–5581 cal BP.
- Published
- 2021
21. Kostënki 9: The chronology and lithic assemblage of a Gravettian site in Russia
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Daria K. Eskova, Sergei N. Lisitsyn, Natalia A. Tsvetkova, Aleksandr Yu Pustovalov, Michael Buckley, and Natasha Reynolds
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010506 paleontology ,Ground stone ,Ornaments ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Archaeology ,law.invention ,Key point ,Geography ,Homogeneous ,law ,Bladelets ,Assemblage (archaeology) ,Radiocarbon dating ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Chronology - Abstract
Kostenki 9 is a small Gravettian site in the Kostenki-Borshchevo area of Russia, known for a highly homogeneous assemblage of ventrally truncated backed bladelets, as well as the presence of ground stone artefacts. The site was mainly excavated during the twentieth century but in recent years small-scale work has begun again at the site. Until now no radiocarbon dates have been available for the site, although it has been assumed to be broadly contemporary with Borshchevo 5/I and Kostenki 4 due to similarities in their assemblages. Here we present the first radiocarbon dates for the site, which confirm that the site is roughly the same age as Borshchevo 5/I and Kostenki 4, and older than the Kostenki-Avdeevo Culture sites in the region. We also present an overview of the lithic assemblage (both knapped and ground stone) based on recent studies. The truncated backed bladelets found at the site are highly comparable to similar artefacts of approximately the same age found at a series of sites in Central Europe, including Jaksice II, Trencianske Bohuslavice, Petřkovice I and Milovice I. This is a key point of material culture similarity that requires further work but which hints at long-distance social and cultural links across Eastern and Central Europe slightly pre-dating the well-known connections that have been established based on the shared presence of shouldered points. Similarities in material culture across this region are further attested by analogies among personal ornaments – waisted double-headed beads – found at the Kostenki sites and at Grub/Kranawetberg in Austria.
- Published
- 2021
22. Morphology, function, petrography and provenance of ground stone tool assemblage from Niemczańska, Poland in the light of late Bronze Age lithic production in the Odra basin
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Ewa Lisowska, Katarzyna Derkowska, Justyna Baron, and Wojciech Bartz
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010506 paleontology ,Provenance ,Geochemistry ,Ground stone ,Structural basin ,010502 geochemistry & geophysics ,01 natural sciences ,Petrography ,Bronze Age ,Assemblage (archaeology) ,Glacial period ,Geology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Gneiss - Abstract
This paper presents results of morphological and petrological analyses of ground stone tool assemblage acquired from late Bronze Age settlement site at Niemczanska, Wroclaw, Poland. The collection of six tools is functionally and petrologically diverse but comparable in terms of physical and mechanical properties, i.e. hardness and wear resistance. Exclusively hard and quartz-rich rocks were selected for tools production (granites, gneisses and sandstones). We applied complementary approaches: polarizing optical microscopy with modal mineralogical analyses, scanning electron microscopy and electron probe microanalyser for the petrographic and raw material provenance study. The results of our observations lead to the conclusion that raw material was collected locally from the surface deposits associated with glacial erratics brought to the area during MIS-16 to Saalian glaciations from Sweden and Aland Islands. Our observations confirm that erratics were a common source of raw material for the Odra Basin populations during the Bronze Age instead of autochthonic Sudetic or allogenic materials. Agricultural (grinder and grinding disc) and non-agricultural (whetstone, pad/fragment of a grinding disc, grinder and smoother) functions are recognised, based on morphological observations and use-wear traces. Three activity zones are distinguished at the site – production, habitation and possible cult zone with lithic tools spread within production and habitation zones.
- Published
- 2021
23. The Middle Paleolithic ground stones tools of Nesher Ramla unit V (Southern Levant): A multi-scale use-wear approach for assessing the assemblage functional variability
- Author
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Walter Gneisinger, Eduardo Paixão, Marion Prévost, Geoff Carver, João Marreiros, Yossi Zaidner, and Laure Dubreuil
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Southern Levant ,Middle Paleolithic ,business.industry ,Environmental resource management ,Archaeological record ,Ground stone ,Diversification (marketing strategy) ,Geography ,Ground stone tools ,Use wear ,Quantification ,Assemblage (archaeology) ,business ,Experiments ,Hammerstone ,Exploitation of natural resources ,Levant ,Earth-Surface Processes - Abstract
In the archaeological record, Ground Stone Tools (hereafter GST) represent an important tool group that provides invaluable data for exploring technological development and changes in resource exploitation over time. Despite its importance, Lower and Middle Paleolithic (MP) GST technology remains poorly known and understudied. The MP record of the Levant constitutes a compelling case study for exploring the nature and character of GST technology. Especially the site of Nesher Ramla (Israel, end of Marine Isotope Stage 6/beginning of 5) has provided one of the world's largest GST assemblages from MP contexts. Aiming at evaluating the variability of tool types at the site from a technological and functional perspective, this study follows an analytical approach which integrates different scales of analysis. Our workflow seeks to generate and combine qualitative and quantitative data allowing: 1) the identification of damage areas, and 2) functional analysis, based on the location, distribution, and characterization of use-wear traces. This study shows a substantial level of diversification in resource exploitation (e.g., mineral, hard animal material and likely perishable components). Results show the presence of several tool types on which diagnostic use-wear can be associated with different activities. Importantly, our analysis indicates the presence of various hammerstone types showing distinct wear characteristics. The variability observed within the hammerstones likely reflects different functions, including in some cases the processing of distinct worked materials. Ultimately, this study contributes to our understanding of the significance of GST technology for the ecological dynamics of MP populations. info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
- Published
- 2022
24. Tool Manufacture
- Author
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Odell, George H., Orser, Charles E., Jr., editor, Schiffer, Michael B., editor, and Odell, George H.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Maize Dependence among the Sevier Puebloans
- Author
-
Nancy J. Coulam
- Subjects
Archeology ,History ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Marsh ,Agriculture ,business.industry ,Anthropology ,Ground stone ,Structural basin ,business ,Archaeology ,Riparian zone - Abstract
Some archaeologists have argued that the Formative-era villagers of the Sevier River region in the eastern Great Basin were primarily foragers whose economy was dependent upon marsh resources, espe...
- Published
- 2021
26. Lithic Materials
- Author
-
Rapp, George R., Herrmann, Bernd, editor, Wagner, Günther A., editor, and Rapp, George R.
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Iranian Neolithic
- Author
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Peasnall, Brian L., Peregrine, Peter N., editor, and Ember, Melvin, editor
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Iranian Mesolithic : Iranian Epipaleolithic
- Author
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Peasnall, Brian L., Peregrine, Peter N., editor, and Ember, Melvin, editor
- Published
- 2002
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Ground stone tools from the copper production site Al-Khashbah, Sultanate of Oman
- Author
-
Stephanie Döpper
- Subjects
Feature (archaeology) ,Archaeological research ,Bronze Age ,Homogeneous ,lcsh:Archaeology ,Ground stone ,3d model ,Context (language use) ,Excavation ,lcsh:CC1-960 ,al-khashbah ,copper production ,ground stone tools ,early bronze age ,oman ,eastern arabia ,Archaeology ,Geology - Abstract
Archaeological research at Al-Khashbah, Sultanate of Oman, conducted by the University of Tübingen, revealed a large Early Bronze Age (3rd millennium BCE) site. During the intensive surface survey and excavations, several ground stone tools were found. Most of them came from the vicinity of monumental stone and mud-brick structures, so-called towers, and are clearly connected to copper-processing waste such as slag, furnace fragments and prills, i.e., droplets of molten copper. Therefore, it is assumed that these ground stone tools were used within the operational procedures of copper-processing. Interestingly, only the monumental towers from the first half of the 3rd millennium BCE, i.e., the Hafit period, feature larger quantities of ground stone tools as well as copper processing waste. Towers from the second half of the 3rd millennium BCE, i.e., the Umm an-Nar period, have none. Within the scope of this paper, the distribution of the different types of ground stone tools in Al-Khashbah as well as their find context will be presented. They are illustrated with drawings generated from 3D models created using digital photography processed with the software Agisoft Photoscan. Comparisons with other 3rd millennium BCE sites in Eastern Arabia show that there as well, copper-processing remains are often associated with ground stone tools. The overall variety of types seems to be rather homogeneous in the region.
- Published
- 2020
30. Ground stone technology in context: Consumption of grinding tools and social practice at Neolithic Avgi, NW Greece
- Author
-
Tasos Bekiaris
- Subjects
050101 languages & linguistics ,Context (archaeology) ,05 social sciences ,Ground stone ,Excavation ,Consumption (sociology) ,Social practice ,Archaeology ,Grinding ,Context analysis ,Geography ,ground stone technology ,grinding slabs ,grinders ,contextual analysis ,neolithic greece ,050903 gender studies ,lcsh:Archaeology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,lcsh:CC1-960 ,0509 other social sciences ,Social identity theory - Abstract
Excavations at the Neolithic site of Avgi (Middle-Late Neolithic, circa 5700-4500 cal. BCE) in the Kastoria region, northwestern Greece, brought to light one of the largest ground stone assemblages known from Neolithic Greece. More than 8000 ground stone tools and objects, raw materials and by-products comprise a valuable record for investigating various aspects of ground stone technology (production, consumption, discard), while their rich contextual information provides an ideal opportunity for addressing its significance for Neolithic societies. This paper examines the presence of grinding tools (stable grinding slabs and mobile grinders, their raw materials and by-products) within different spatiotemporal contexts (habitational phases, buildings, open areas, pits). Through the detailed technological and contextual analysis of the grinding artifacts we seek to explore different aspects of their biographies, related to their manufacture, use, maintenance, destruction and discard, within the context of a single Neolithic community. The goal is to shed light on the multiple ways through which the Neolithic society of Avgi consumed those technological products in various social occasions, practices and places (e.g., daily routine activities, special events of communal or symbolic character, individual houses and communal activity areas) and explore their role in the formation of social identities and the production of social meaning.
- Published
- 2020
31. Early Desert Archaic
- Author
-
Roth, Barbara, Peregrine, Peter N., editor, and Ember, Melvin, editor
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Provisioning the High Country: A Distributional Analysis of Ground Stone Tools from the Colorado Front Range.
- Author
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Pelton, Spencer R.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Lipid residues preserved in sheltered bedrock features at Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument, New Mexico
- Author
-
Tammy Buonasera
- Subjects
ground stone ,bedrock mortars ,cupules ,Gila Cliff Dwellings ,GC/MS ,lipid analysis ,Archaeology ,CC1-960 - Abstract
[Research Article] Bedrock features represent various economic, social, and symbolic aspects of past societies, but have historically received little study, particularly in North America. Fortunately, new techniques for analyzing spatial configurations, use-wear, and organic residues are beginning to unlock more of the interpretive potential of these features. Though preliminary in nature, the present study contributes to this trend by documenting an application of lipid analysis to bedrock features in a dry rockshelter. Results of this initial application indicate that bedrock features in dry rockshelters may provide especially favorable conditions for the preservation and interpretation of ancient organic residues. Abundant lipids, comparable to concentrations present in some pottery sherds, were extracted from a bedrock grinding surface at Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument and analyzed using gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Though the lipids were highly oxidized, degradation products indicative of former unsaturated fatty acids were retained. Comparisons to experimentally aged residues, and absence of a known biomarker for maize, indicate that the bulk of the lipids preserved in the milling surface probably derive from processing an oily nut or seed resource, and not from processing maize. Substantially lower amounts of lipids were recovered from a small, blackened cupule. It is hypothesized that some portion of the lipids in the blackened cupule was deposited from condensed smoke of cooking and heating fires in the caves. Potential for the preservation of organic residues in similar sheltered bedrock contexts is discussed, and a practical method for sampling bedrock features in the field is described.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Functional studies of flaked and ground stone artefacts reveal starchy tree nut and root exploitation in mid-Holocene highland New Guinea
- Author
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Richard Fullagar, Judith Field, Glenn R. Summerhayes, L Kealhofer, M Lovave, Elspeth Hayes, Herman Mandui, Sindy Luu, Matthew Leavesley, Anne Ford, and Adelle C.F. Coster
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,Pleistocene ,Context (language use) ,Wetland ,01 natural sciences ,0601 history and archaeology ,Holocene ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Earth-Surface Processes ,Global and Planetary Change ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,060102 archaeology ,Ecology ,biology ,business.industry ,Paleontology ,Ground stone ,06 humanities and the arts ,biology.organism_classification ,Archaeology ,Geography ,Taxon ,Agriculture ,Castanopsis acuminatissima ,business - Abstract
Ground stone technology for processing starchy plant foods has its origins in the late Pleistocene, with subsequent intensification and transformation of this technology coinciding with the global emergence of agriculture in the early Holocene. On the island of New Guinea, agriculture first emerges in the highland Wahgi Valley, potentially from c. 9 kya, and clearly evident by 6.5 kya. Approximately 400 km further east in the highland Ivane Valley, long-term occupation sequences span the Holocene and late Pleistocene, but there is currently no direct evidence for wetland agriculture. Here, we report rare evidence for ground stone implements from a secure mid-Holocene archaeological context in the Ivane Valley. The Joe’s Garden site has flaked and ground stone artefacts with significant starch assemblages dating to approximately 4.4 kya. We present the first empirical evidence for the function of stone bowls from a New Guinea highland setting. Usewear and residues indicate the grinding and pounding of endemic starch-rich plant foods. Geometric morphometric analysis of starch grains shows that at least two taxa were processed: Castanopsis acuminatissima (nut) and Pueraria lobata (tuber). This regional example adds to our understanding of the trajectories of diverse plant food exploitation and ground stone technology development witnessed globally in the Holocene.
- Published
- 2020
35. A 1,200-year-old ground-stone object from South Western Torres Strait (northeast Australia) and its implications for historicising ethnographically known social networks
- Author
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Jerome Mialanes, Liam M. Brady, Friedrich E. von Gnielinski, and Jeremy Ash
- Subjects
010506 paleontology ,Archeology ,Southern central ,060102 archaeology ,Socio demographics ,New guinea ,Ground stone ,06 humanities and the arts ,01 natural sciences ,Object (philosophy) ,Torres strait ,Geography ,Ethnology ,0601 history and archaeology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
Ground-stone objects such as stone-headed clubs (gabagab) and axes/adzes held key positions in ethnographically known social networks encompassing Torres Strait and southern central New Guinea. How...
- Published
- 2020
36. Cody Complex foragers and their use of grooved abraders in Great Plains and Rocky Mountains of North America
- Author
-
Jason M. LaBelle and Cody Newton
- Subjects
Archeology ,Geography ,Lithic technology ,Ground stone ,Archaeology - Abstract
Comparison of Late Paleoindian sites of the Great Plains and Rocky Mountains reveals 36 site components from 28 sites containing ground stone tools, including nine Cody Complex examples. Much of the ground stone use appears related to generalized activity, as few items have functionally specific forms. However, the Cody components have an unexpectedly higher number of grooved abraders as compared to other complexes. We note that Paleoindian examples contain wider u-shaped grooves compared to Late Prehistoric/Protohistoric abraders related to arrow production. We argue that Paleoindian abraders represent shaft abraders, used in the production of dart shafts within weaponry systems. We propose several hypotheses for the emergence of this technology during Cody times. The most parsimonious explanation is that the specific sites containing these abraders represent large camps, occupied for long periods and containing diverse chipped and ground stone assemblages.
- Published
- 2020
37. AKMENINIAI GLUDINTI KIRVIAI LIETUVOJE. TIPOLOGIJOS IR TERMINOLOGIJOS PROBLEMOS / GROUND STONE AXES IN LITHUANIA. PROBLEMS OF TYPOLOGY AND TERMINOLOGY
- Author
-
Vygandas Juodagalvis
- Subjects
Typology ,010506 paleontology ,Geography ,060102 archaeology ,Ground stone ,0601 history and archaeology ,06 humanities and the arts ,01 natural sciences ,Archaeology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Terminology - Abstract
During 1974–1978, the Lithuanian Institute of History published four volumes of the Lietuvos archeologijos atlasas (Atlas of Lithuanian Archaeology). The atlas’s first book, which was edited by Dr habil. Rimutė Rimantienė, was devoted to Stone and Bronze Age sites and stray finds from this period (Atlasas 1974). The separate article of this book (Bagušienė, Rimantienė 1974) encompassed all of the ground stone artefacts that had been mapped and were preserved at that time in Lithuanian museums. The work listed 2560 ground stone artefacts from 1420 find spots and created distribution maps, an index of the main types, and a typology scheme, which Lithuanian archaeologists and museologists have used for almost half a century. The typological scheme of ground stone artefacts created by Ona Bagušienė and Rimutė Rimantienė is seen not as an unalterable constant, but as a dynamic, modifiable classification structure. The article presents insights and thoughts that arose in creating a ground stone artefact database for SW Lithuania (Užnemunė). And examines the most abundant ground artefact ypological group, perforated stone axes. Keywords: perforated ground stone axes, typology, terminology.
- Published
- 2020
38. Grinding Tools at the Third Intermediate Period Tell el-Retaba
- Author
-
Agnieszka Ryś-Jarmużek
- Subjects
Archeology ,History ,Geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Period (geology) ,Ground stone ,Excavation ,Nile delta ,Archaeology ,Wadi ,Preliminary analysis ,Grinding - Abstract
Tell el-Retaba, an archaeological site situated in Wadi Tumilat in the eastern Nile Delta, some 35 km west of the modern city of Ismailia, has been excavated by the Polish- Slovak Archaeological Mission, directed by Dr. hab. Slawomir Rzepka, since 2007. Long-lasting archaeological excavations of the Third Intermediate Period settlement have yielded hundreds of ground stone artefacts, among them implements used for grinding activities. The diversity of these tools’ forms and the material they are made of may imply their having been employed for various purposes and to treat a wide range of substances. This article presents a preliminary analysis of the grinding stone implements and their possible uses.
- Published
- 2020
39. Vol. 2, Chapter 5 42KA6168.pdf
- Author
-
Roberts, Heidi
- Subjects
Archaeological Feature ,Chipped Stone ,Metal ,San Pedro phase ,Pueblo II ,Dating Sample ,Non-Domestic Structures ,Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex ,Macrobotanical ,Ceramic ,Wood ,Pueblo I ,ARCHAIC PERIOD (CA 6500-3000 BC) ,Archaic ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Fauna ,Ground Stone ,Basketmaker III ,Southwestern Utah ,Basketmaker II ,Shell ,Pollen ,Ancestral Puebloan ,Mineral - Abstract
add description
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Vol. 1, Appendix G.pdf
- Author
-
Roberts, Heidi
- Subjects
Archaeological Feature ,Chipped Stone ,Metal ,San Pedro phase ,Pueblo II ,Dating Sample ,Non-Domestic Structures ,Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex ,Macrobotanical ,Ceramic ,Wood ,Pueblo I ,ARCHAIC PERIOD (CA 6500-3000 BC) ,Archaic ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Fauna ,Ground Stone ,Basketmaker III ,Southwestern Utah ,Basketmaker II ,Shell ,Pollen ,Ancestral Puebloan ,Mineral - Abstract
add description
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Vol. 6, Chapter 2 42KA6163.pdf
- Author
-
Roberts, Heidi
- Subjects
Archaeological Feature ,Chipped Stone ,Metal ,San Pedro phase ,Pueblo II ,Dating Sample ,Non-Domestic Structures ,Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex ,Macrobotanical ,Ceramic ,Wood ,Pueblo I ,ARCHAIC PERIOD (CA 6500-3000 BC) ,Archaic ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Fauna ,Ground Stone ,Basketmaker III ,Southwestern Utah ,Basketmaker II ,Shell ,Pollen ,Ancestral Puebloan ,Mineral - Abstract
add description
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Vol. 1, Appendix H.pdf
- Author
-
Roberts, Heidi
- Subjects
Archaeological Feature ,Chipped Stone ,Metal ,San Pedro phase ,Pueblo II ,Dating Sample ,Non-Domestic Structures ,Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex ,Macrobotanical ,Ceramic ,Wood ,Pueblo I ,ARCHAIC PERIOD (CA 6500-3000 BC) ,Archaic ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Fauna ,Ground Stone ,Basketmaker III ,Southwestern Utah ,Basketmaker II ,Shell ,Pollen ,Ancestral Puebloan ,Mineral - Abstract
add description
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Vol. 7, Chapter 8 Ethnobotany.pdf
- Author
-
Roberts, Heidi
- Subjects
Archaeological Feature ,Chipped Stone ,Metal ,San Pedro phase ,Pueblo II ,Dating Sample ,Non-Domestic Structures ,Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex ,Macrobotanical ,Ceramic ,Wood ,Pueblo I ,ARCHAIC PERIOD (CA 6500-3000 BC) ,Archaic ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Fauna ,Ground Stone ,Basketmaker III ,Southwestern Utah ,Basketmaker II ,Shell ,Pollen ,Ancestral Puebloan ,Mineral - Abstract
add description
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Salt River Project Forest 500 Vegetation Management Cultural Resources Data Comparison
- Author
-
Vance, Meghann M.
- Subjects
AR-03-12-04-878 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-05-712 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-05-604 (TNF) ,Artifact Scatter ,AR-03-12-06-607 (TNF) ,APS-CS-257 ,AZ P:13:10(ASM) ,APS-CS-259 ,State Route 88 ,APS-CS-258 ,State Route 288 ,AR-03-12-02-1403 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-05-1197 (TNF) ,AZ V:1:11(ASM) ,AR-03-12-06-3045 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-05-1194 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:40(ASM) ,AR-03-12-05-1089 (TNF) ,APS-CS-254 ,AR-03-12-06-2943 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:25(ASM) ,APS-CS-29 ,APS-CS-28 ,AR-03-12-05-563 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-06-282 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:19(ASU) ,AR-03-12-02-1333 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:39(ASM) ,AR-03-12-06-627 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:41(ASM) ,Roosevelt to Miami Transmission Line ,Tonto Basin Ranger District ,AR-03-12-05-291 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:7(ASU) ,Road ,AR-03-12-05-304 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-06-621 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-05-1398 (TNF) ,AZ V:1:100(ASM) ,AR-03-12-05-1090 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-05-294 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-05-301 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:49(ASM) ,AZ V:5:12(ASM) ,AR-03-12-06-1635 (TNF) ,Mine ,House ,AZ V:1:21(ASM) ,AR-03-12-06-281 (TNF) ,APS-CS-278 ,AZ V:1:22(ASM) ,APS-CS-70 ,AR-03-12-06-618 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:43(ASM) ,AZ V:5:198(ASM) ,Cherry Creek Road ,Chipped Stone ,AR-03-12-06-622 (TNF) ,AZ V:1:18(ASM) ,AR-03-12-05-157 (TNF) ,Ceramic ,Archaic ,APS-CS-202 ,AZ V:1:88(ASM) ,AR-03-12-06-258 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-06-3044 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:37(ASM) ,AR-03-12-06-1634 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:34(ASM) ,AZ V:1:115(ASM) ,AZ O:12:33 (ASM) ,AR-03-12-05-309 (TNF) ,Old Globe High Line Road ,AZ V:1:9(ASM) ,AZ V:5:34(ASU) ,AZ V:1:6(ASM) ,Historic ,AZ V:1:4(ASM) ,AZ V:5:15(ASU) ,AR-03-12-06-195 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-05-57 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-06-603 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-06-620 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:47(ASM) ,AR-03-12-05-292 (TNF)/AZ V:1:9(ASM) ,AZ V:5:16(ASM) ,Concord Road ,AR-03-12-05-81 (TNF) ,AR-0-3-12-05-306 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:14(ASM) ,AR-03-12-05-771 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-06-3046 (TNF) ,Metal ,AZ V:5:17(ASM) ,AR-03-12-05-1195 (TNF) ,Hohokam ,AZ V:5:33(ASM) ,Encampment ,Historic SR 88 ,AZ V:5:44(ASM) ,Pleasant Valley Ranger District ,APS-CS-223 ,AR-03-12-05-567 (TNF) ,APS-CS-228 ,Ground Stone ,APS-CS-227 ,AR-03-12-05-1088 (TNF) ,APS-CS-229 ,AR-03-12-06-616 (TNF) ,Tonto Basin ,APS-CS-462 ,AR-03-12-06-619 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:190(ASM) ,AZ V:1:7(ASM) ,AZ V:5:57(ASU) ,AR-03-12-05-236 (TNF) ,AZ V:5:114(ASM) ,APS-CS-38 ,AR-03-12-05-449 (TNF) ,Forest Highway 11 ,AR-03-12-05-1196 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-06-3047 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-05-292 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-05-1399 (TNF) ,Forest Highway 12 ,AZ V:5:20(ASM) ,AZ V:5:19(ASM) ,AR-03-12-02-1332 (TNF) ,APS-CS-236 ,APS-CS-238 ,AZ V:1:8(ASM) ,AR-03-12-06-239 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-06-625 (TNF) ,APS-CS-36 ,APS-CS-34 ,APS-CS-33 ,APS-CS-231 ,Room Block / Compound / Pueblo ,AZ V:5:58(ASU) ,APS-CS-31 ,APS-CS-233 ,APS-CS-474 ,APS-CS-232 ,AR-03-12-05-1080 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-06-614 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-05-310 (TNF) ,AZ V:1:23(ASM) ,AZ V:5:42(ASM) ,Water Control Feature ,AR-03-12-05-305 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-06-2935 (TNF) ,AZ P:13:37(ASM) ,Historic SR 288 ,APS-CS-245 ,AZ V:5:56 (ASM) ,APS-CS-489 ,AZ V:5:197(ASM) ,APS-CS-128 ,AR-03-12-06-609 (TNF) ,Glass ,AR-03-12-06-631 (TNF) ,AR-03-12-06-243 (TNF) ,APS-CS-44 ,APS-CS-241 ,APS-CS-43 ,APS-CS-244 ,APS-CS-243 - Abstract
The Salt River Project (SRP) is planning to conduct 5-year vegetation management along their Coronado-Silvering 500 kV transmission line beginning in May 2022. The portion of the transmission right-of-way (ROW) that crosses Tonto National Forest (TNF)’s Tonto Basin and Pleasant Valley Ranger Districts will be subject to vegetation management during this cycle. The entire length of the proposed treatment corridor has been previously surveyed, with the most recent survey conducted by Logan Simpson in 2016 (Cook et al. 2017). Review of the existing data sources, however, reveals numerous discrepancies in site location, site extent, and concordance among Arizona State Museum (ASM) assigned numbers, Forest Service assigned numbers, and other site numbering systems. Thus, the purpose of this project is to reconcile, to the extent possible, those discrepancies and to provide updated spatial data and recommendations. This will allow SRP to determine spans in which vegetation management by hand is needed to preserve cultural resources sites.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Vol. 2, Chapter 1 42KA6164.pdf
- Author
-
Roberts, Heidi
- Subjects
Archaeological Feature ,Chipped Stone ,Metal ,San Pedro phase ,Pueblo II ,Dating Sample ,Non-Domestic Structures ,Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex ,Macrobotanical ,Ceramic ,Wood ,Pueblo I ,ARCHAIC PERIOD (CA 6500-3000 BC) ,Archaic ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Fauna ,Ground Stone ,Basketmaker III ,Southwestern Utah ,Basketmaker II ,Shell ,Pollen ,Ancestral Puebloan ,Mineral - Abstract
add description
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Vol. 3, Chapter 1 42KA6158.pdf
- Author
-
Roberts, Heidi
- Subjects
Archaeological Feature ,Chipped Stone ,Metal ,San Pedro phase ,Pueblo II ,Dating Sample ,Non-Domestic Structures ,Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex ,Macrobotanical ,Ceramic ,Wood ,Pueblo I ,ARCHAIC PERIOD (CA 6500-3000 BC) ,Archaic ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Fauna ,Ground Stone ,Basketmaker III ,Southwestern Utah ,Basketmaker II ,Shell ,Pollen ,Ancestral Puebloan ,Mineral - Abstract
add description
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Cultural Resources Investigations along Reaches 1 and 2 of the San Carlos Irrigation Project Rehabilitation, Florence, Arizona: Report
- Author
-
Aguila, Lourdes, Davis, Peg, Gregory, Andrea, Huckleberry, Gary A., Jones, John, Jones, Thomas, Kovalchik, Jacob, McClain, Brittany, Punzmann, Walter R., Rich, Jennifer, Rodriguez, Lesley, and Archaeological Consulting Services, Ltd.
- Subjects
Historic ,Site Evaluation / Testing ,Fire Cracked Rock ,Dating Sample ,Pioneer Period ,Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex ,San Carlos Irrigation and Drainage District ,Artifact Scatter ,AZ U:15:124(ASM) ,Hamlet / Village ,AZ U:15:676(ASM) ,AZ AA:3:215 (ASM) ,Shell ,Building Materials ,Sedentary Period ,Mineral ,Chipped Stone ,Metal ,Water Control Feature ,Hohokam ,Macrobotanical ,Settlements ,Euro-American ,AZ U:15:861(ASM) ,Ceramic ,Wood ,Pinal County, AZ ,Ground Disturbance Monitoring ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Euroamerican ,Fauna ,AZ U:15:663(ASM) ,Ground Stone ,Colonial Period ,Pollen ,Glass ,Human Remains ,Classic Period - Abstract
In accordance with the provisions of the 2004 Arizona Water Settlement Act, the Bureau of Reclamation, Phoenix Area Office (PXAO) assisted the San Carlos Irrigation and Drainage District (SCIDD) in the preparation of an environmental assessment (EA) prior to the rehabilitation of portions of the San Carlos Irrigation Project, a Bureau of Indian Affairs water delivery system that serves both the Gila River Indian Community and SCIDD. The project area extends along the current and realigned portions of the Florence Canal, from the sediment basin just south of the Ashurst-Hayden Diversion Dam to Picacho Reservoir. In order to comply with stipulations set forth in the EA, all historic properties within the expanded APE must be mitigated prior to construction. At the request of PXAO, Archaeological Consulting Services, Ltd. prepared a historic property treatment plan (treatment plan) to conduct Phase 2 data recovery at AZ U:15:676(ASM), eligibility testing at AZ U:15:861(ASM), Phase 1 data recovery for the new and previously uninvestigated portions of the canal alignment at AZ U:15:124(ASM) and AZ U:15:663(ASM), and Phase 2 data recovery based on previous excavations within the revised APE at AZ U:15:663(ASM). This final report presents the results of these cultural resources investigations.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Cultural Resources Investigations along Reaches 1 and 2 of the San Carlos Irrigation Project Rehabilitation, Florence, Arizona: Photo Log and Contact Sheets
- Author
-
Rich, Jennifer, Punzmann, Walter R., Rodriguez, Lesley, Kovalchik, Jacob, McClain, Brittany, and Archaeological Consulting Services, Ltd.
- Subjects
Historic ,Site Evaluation / Testing ,Fire Cracked Rock ,Dating Sample ,Pioneer Period ,Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex ,San Carlos Irrigation and Drainage District ,Artifact Scatter ,AZ U:15:124(ASM) ,Hamlet / Village ,AZ U:15:676(ASM) ,AZ AA:3:215 (ASM) ,Shell ,Building Materials ,Sedentary Period ,Mineral ,Chipped Stone ,Metal ,Water Control Feature ,Hohokam ,Macrobotanical ,Settlements ,Euro-American ,AZ U:15:861(ASM) ,Ceramic ,Wood ,Pinal County, AZ ,Ground Disturbance Monitoring ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Euroamerican ,Fauna ,AZ U:15:663(ASM) ,Ground Stone ,Colonial Period ,Pollen ,Glass ,Human Remains ,Classic Period - Abstract
n accordance with the provisions of the 2004 Arizona Water Settlement Act, the Bureau of Reclamation, Phoenix Area Office (PXAO) assisted the San Carlos Irrigation and Drainage District (SCIDD) in the preparation of an environmental assessment (EA) prior to the rehabilitation of portions of the San Carlos Irrigation Project, a Bureau of Indian Affairs water delivery system that serves both the Gila River Indian Community and SCIDD. The project area extends along the current and realigned portions of the Florence Canal, from the sediment basin just south of the Ashurst-Hayden Diversion Dam to Picacho Reservoir. In order to comply with stipulations set forth in the EA, all historic properties within the expanded APE must be mitigated prior to construction. At the request of PXAO, Archaeological Consulting Services, Ltd. prepared a historic property treatment plan (treatment plan) to conduct Phase 2 data recovery at AZ U:15:676(ASM), eligibility testing at AZ U:15:861(ASM), Phase 1 data recovery for the new and previously uninvestigated portions of the canal alignment at AZ U:15:124(ASM) and AZ U:15:663(ASM), and Phase 2 data recovery based on previous excavations within the revised APE at AZ U:15:663(ASM). This document contains the contact sheets (photos) and photo log associated with these cultural resources investigations.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Vol. 1, Chapter 4 Previous Research.pdf
- Author
-
Roberts, Heidi
- Subjects
Archaeological Feature ,Chipped Stone ,Metal ,San Pedro phase ,Pueblo II ,Dating Sample ,Non-Domestic Structures ,Domestic Structure or Architectural Complex ,Macrobotanical ,Ceramic ,Wood ,Pueblo I ,ARCHAIC PERIOD (CA 6500-3000 BC) ,Archaic ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Fauna ,Ground Stone ,Basketmaker III ,Southwestern Utah ,Basketmaker II ,Shell ,Pollen ,Ancestral Puebloan ,Mineral - Abstract
add description
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. End of Fieldwork Report for Phase I Testing and Phase II Data Recovery at AZ U:10:32(ASM)/Sand Dune South, Queen Creek, Maricopa County, Arizona
- Author
-
Schroeder, David and Forest, Marion
- Subjects
Pit House / Earth Lodge ,Fire Cracked Rock ,Chipped Stone ,AZ U:10:32(ASM) ,Hohokam ,Artifact Scatter ,Ball Court ,Ceramic ,Sand Dune South ,Data Recovery / Excavation ,Ground Stone ,Queen Creek ,Trash Midden ,Human Remains ,Maricopa (County) - Abstract
To meet increased demand for electricity due to growth, SRP plans to construct an approximately 20-mile (mi), double-circuit, 230-kilovolt (kV) transmission line including associated tubular steel pole structures that average 110–140 feet (ft) tall (Project). The Project will connect three 230/69kV receiving stations, including the Ball Substation in Gilbert, the Pfister Substation in southeastern Queen Creek, and the Abel Substation east of San Tan Valley. This Project was approved by the Arizona Corporation Commission (ACC) in 2009, when they issued a Certificate of Environmental Compatibility (CEC) (Decision No. 71441). AZ U:10:32(ASM)/Sand Dune South (hereafter referred to as AZ U:10:32(ASM)) is a large prehistoric Hohokam village site historically documented as containing a ballcourt and several mound features. The site has since been entirely covered and affected by historic and modern agricultural activity – leaving the status of subsurface cultural deposits unknown – and is presently unevaluated for inclusion in the NRHP and ARHP. This end of fieldwork (EOF) report documents the eight features and two non-features (including two features and one non-feature originally recorded during the Phase I testing) that were recorded as a result of the phased archaeological data recovery conducted by PaleoWest during the course of the Project.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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