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Social and Behavioral Sciences Commons

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Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Social and Behavioral Sciences

Spreading The Word: Some Ideas On Publication And Education, Edward S. Rutsch Apr 2014

Spreading The Word: Some Ideas On Publication And Education, Edward S. Rutsch

Northeast Historical Archaeology

No abstract is available at this time.


Archaeological Field Techniques And Problems, John H. Mead Apr 2014

Archaeological Field Techniques And Problems, John H. Mead

Northeast Historical Archaeology

No abstract is available at this time.


Fort Nonsense, Edward S. Rutsch, Sally Skinner Apr 2014

Fort Nonsense, Edward S. Rutsch, Sally Skinner

Northeast Historical Archaeology

No abstract is available at this time.


The Nature And Scope Of Archaeological Observation, Budd Wilson Apr 2014

The Nature And Scope Of Archaeological Observation, Budd Wilson

Northeast Historical Archaeology

No abstract is available at this time.


Camp Reading: Logistics Of A Revolutionary War Winter Encampment, David A. Poirier Mar 2014

Camp Reading: Logistics Of A Revolutionary War Winter Encampment, David A. Poirier

Northeast Historical Archaeology

No abstract is available at this time.


Excavations At The Bull-Jackson Farmstead, Orange County, New York, Thomas J. Riley Mar 2014

Excavations At The Bull-Jackson Farmstead, Orange County, New York, Thomas J. Riley

Northeast Historical Archaeology

No abstract is available at this time.


Lithic Analysis Of The Jot-Em-Down Shelter (15mcy348) Collection: Settlement Patterns, Raw Material Utilization, And Shelter Activities Along The Cumberland Plateau, Mary M. White Jan 2014

Lithic Analysis Of The Jot-Em-Down Shelter (15mcy348) Collection: Settlement Patterns, Raw Material Utilization, And Shelter Activities Along The Cumberland Plateau, Mary M. White

Theses and Dissertations--Anthropology

The Jot-em-Down Shelter (15McY348) was excavated by U.S. Forest Service archaeologists in 1986. The present study concentrated on the lithic assemblage, with a particular focus on the chipped stone debitage. The Jot-em-Down Shelter lithic assemblage was compared to assemblages recovered from four nearby sites, open sites 15McY570 and 15McY616, and rockshelter sites 15McY403 and 15McY409; and rockshelter sites located in and near the Red River Gorge, Cold Oak Shelter (15LE50) and Rock Bridge Shelter (15WO75). This study determined that Jot-em-Down Shelter was a multicomponent site utilized by mobile groups of people from the Early Archaic through Mississippi periods. Use of …