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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons™
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- Archaeology -- Methodology (1)
- Chinook Indians -- Antiquities (1)
- Excavations (Archaeology) -- Pacific Northwest Region (1)
- Excavations (Archaeology) -- Washington (State) -- Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge (1)
- Fire ecology -- Pacific Northwest (1)
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- Historic preservation -- Washington (State) -- Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge (1)
- Human ecology -- Pacific Northwest (1)
- Indians of North America -- Agriculture -- Pacific Northwest (1)
- Indians of North America -- Pacific Northwest--Social life and customs (1)
- Prehistoric hearths (1)
- Prescribed burning -- Pacific Northwest -- Social life and customs (1)
- Ridgefield (Wash.) -- Antiquities (1)
- Stone implements -- Analysis (1)
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences
The Experimental Reduction Of Rock In A Camas Oven: Towards An Understanding Of The Behavioral Significance Of Fire-Cracked Rock, Douglas C. Wilson, David V. Delyria
The Experimental Reduction Of Rock In A Camas Oven: Towards An Understanding Of The Behavioral Significance Of Fire-Cracked Rock, Douglas C. Wilson, David V. Delyria
Anthropology Faculty Publications and Presentations
The selection and management of rock for roasting ovens, hearths, and sweat lodges were not trivial concerns for prehistoric households. The results of replicating a camas roasting oven are used to address the use-life and use-stages of fire-cracked rock. We concluded that the industry associated with the procurement and management of fire-cracked rock in the Pacific Northwest required significant quantities of labor and expertise to manage the raw materials and camas roasting byproducts. Recording the technological performance characteristics of fire-cracked rocks, including composition, size, and durability, is a necessary step to interpret and compare fire-cracked rock features at archaeological sites.
Strategies Of Indian Burning In The Willamette Valley, Robert T. Boyd
Strategies Of Indian Burning In The Willamette Valley, Robert T. Boyd
Anthropology Faculty Publications and Presentations
This chapter, included in Indians, Fire and the Land in the Pacific Northwest, published by the Oregon State University Press in 1999, explores fires set by the aboriginal inhabitants of the Willamette valley.
In 1971, geographer Carl Johannessen and colleagues at the University of Oregon published an article, "The Vegetation of the Willamette Valley," which proposed that, prior to European contact, the Willamette Valley, though surrounded by dense forests of Douglas-fir, was an open oak.savanna grassland. They also presented historical evidence to show that these prairie grasslands were maintained by annual fires set by the aboriginal inhabitants of the …
Archaeological Investigations At 45cl1 Cathlapotle (1991-1996) , Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge Clark County, Washington: A Preliminary Report, Kenneth M. Ames, Cameron M. Smith, William L. Cornett, Elizabeth A. Sobel, Stephen C. Hamilton, John Wolf, Doria Raetz, United States. Department Of The Interior, U.S. Fish And Wildlife Service, Region 1, Portland State University. Department Of Anthropology
Archaeological Investigations At 45cl1 Cathlapotle (1991-1996) , Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge Clark County, Washington: A Preliminary Report, Kenneth M. Ames, Cameron M. Smith, William L. Cornett, Elizabeth A. Sobel, Stephen C. Hamilton, John Wolf, Doria Raetz, United States. Department Of The Interior, U.S. Fish And Wildlife Service, Region 1, Portland State University. Department Of Anthropology
Anthropology Faculty Publications and Presentations
This is the preliminary report, one in a series on the archaeology of the Wapato Valley region of the Lower Columbia River. Most of the reports discuss aspects of the excavations and archaeology of two sites, the Meier site (35CO5) and Cathlapotle site (45CL1). Other related topics are also treated.
Archaeological investigations at site 45CL1, Clark County, Washington, demonstrate that the locality is a very large (c 1.5ha), deeply stratified (2-4m) town site with an occupation spanning at least 1000 years (c. AD 1000 to 1840). Six large, complex depressions have been mapped. Test excavations show that these depressions represent …