The propositions that I have argued for in this paper can be summarized as follows:1. The material culture complex that Steward (1937) originally termed "Promontory" represents a distinct archaeological culture that can be distinguished from the Fremont/Sevier on the basis of material culture, settlement pattern, and subsistence strategy.2. The Promontory culture along the Wasatch Front postdates and replaces the Fremont occupation of the region, although the nature and timing of that replacement is uncertain.3. The prehistoric Promontory culture is ancestral to the ethnographically known Numic groups found in the northern region of the eastern Great Basin at the time of historic contact (cf. Madsen 1975). However, a northern Plains influen...
Excavations in the Sevier Desert of western Utah (Fig. 1) have produced architectural evidence for t...
The most significant shift in cultural adaptation in eastern Texas is generally attributed to the Ca...
The term 'Salado' was employed in the 1930's to describe an intrusive Puebloan culture that appeared...
Clearly, the use of Great Basin Shoshonean lifeways and material culture as models for predicting or...
It is important to recognize a Protohistoric period in the cultural historical chronology of the Gre...
Includes bibliographical references.The growth of archaeological understanding of the prehistoric Fr...
dissertationExcavations at Median Village, in Southwestern Utah revealed a complex of dwellings, one...
In addition to assessing site chronology, we were interested in examining an open site in a region w...
The Firehole Basin site (48SW1217), excavated in 1976 and 1977, is the type site for the Firehole ph...
This research employs a sample of archaeological sites from three ecological zones to investigate th...
Archaeologists offer a range of hypotheses about human habitation in the Missouri Ozark Highland dur...
This paper describes an experiment in which the Bustos site is treated as if it were an ethnoarchaeo...
The terms "core" and "periphery" have a long history of use for describing regional variability in t...
The Initial Coalescent Variant of the Middle Missouri Sub-area (Lehmer 1971) poses many problems for...
Suggested sequence of Pre-Ceramic subsistence patterns in the Great Plains Area (circa 9000 B.C. - 1...
Excavations in the Sevier Desert of western Utah (Fig. 1) have produced architectural evidence for t...
The most significant shift in cultural adaptation in eastern Texas is generally attributed to the Ca...
The term 'Salado' was employed in the 1930's to describe an intrusive Puebloan culture that appeared...
Clearly, the use of Great Basin Shoshonean lifeways and material culture as models for predicting or...
It is important to recognize a Protohistoric period in the cultural historical chronology of the Gre...
Includes bibliographical references.The growth of archaeological understanding of the prehistoric Fr...
dissertationExcavations at Median Village, in Southwestern Utah revealed a complex of dwellings, one...
In addition to assessing site chronology, we were interested in examining an open site in a region w...
The Firehole Basin site (48SW1217), excavated in 1976 and 1977, is the type site for the Firehole ph...
This research employs a sample of archaeological sites from three ecological zones to investigate th...
Archaeologists offer a range of hypotheses about human habitation in the Missouri Ozark Highland dur...
This paper describes an experiment in which the Bustos site is treated as if it were an ethnoarchaeo...
The terms "core" and "periphery" have a long history of use for describing regional variability in t...
The Initial Coalescent Variant of the Middle Missouri Sub-area (Lehmer 1971) poses many problems for...
Suggested sequence of Pre-Ceramic subsistence patterns in the Great Plains Area (circa 9000 B.C. - 1...
Excavations in the Sevier Desert of western Utah (Fig. 1) have produced architectural evidence for t...
The most significant shift in cultural adaptation in eastern Texas is generally attributed to the Ca...
The term 'Salado' was employed in the 1930's to describe an intrusive Puebloan culture that appeared...