Excavations in the Sevier Desert of western Utah (Fig. 1) have produced architectural evidence for temporary habitation in small brush, wickiup-type structures between A.D. 1000 and 1100 by people with Fremont material culture. The inventory includes Fremont ceramics, a single corn cob, and projectile points common to, but not exclusive to, Fremont sites (Cottonwood Triangular, Rose Spring Cornernotched, and Desert Side-notched). The site broadens our understanding of Fremont architectural and settlement diversity. Several alternatives for eastern Great Basin Fremont economy are presented in fitting this site into the regional subsistence/settlement pattern(s)
The primary purpose of this article is to present new data regarding igneous toolstone use patterns ...
Sixty rock art elements and styles found in Utah can be grouped into Geometric, Representational, an...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Anthropology, University of New MexicoThis dissertation focuses on the development o...
dissertationExcavations at Median Village, in Southwestern Utah revealed a complex of dwellings, one...
Includes bibliographical references.The growth of archaeological understanding of the prehistoric Fr...
In addition to assessing site chronology, we were interested in examining an open site in a region w...
Fremont is a culture (ca. 300-1300 A.D.) first defined by archaeologist Noel Morss in 1928 based on ...
Prehistoric settlement-subsistence patterns within the Great Basin have been characterized as disper...
Recent identification of a Fremont irrigation feature in southern Utah provides an example from whic...
A Fremont culture tooled vessel, intrusive into the Pueblo culture Coombs site. Height is approximat...
63 pages : illustrations (some color), maps ; 26 cm.The Fort Sage Drift Fence is one of the largest ...
Archaeologists describe the Uinta Fremont (A.D. 0 – 1300) as a mixed foraging-farming society that u...
A collection of incised stones from Western Utah was recently loaned by amateur collectors to the Ut...
The Fremont of the Great Basin and Colorado Plateau represent a diverse group of foragers and farmer...
thesisThe information resultant from three years of excavation at the Evans Mound (42In40) are used ...
The primary purpose of this article is to present new data regarding igneous toolstone use patterns ...
Sixty rock art elements and styles found in Utah can be grouped into Geometric, Representational, an...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Anthropology, University of New MexicoThis dissertation focuses on the development o...
dissertationExcavations at Median Village, in Southwestern Utah revealed a complex of dwellings, one...
Includes bibliographical references.The growth of archaeological understanding of the prehistoric Fr...
In addition to assessing site chronology, we were interested in examining an open site in a region w...
Fremont is a culture (ca. 300-1300 A.D.) first defined by archaeologist Noel Morss in 1928 based on ...
Prehistoric settlement-subsistence patterns within the Great Basin have been characterized as disper...
Recent identification of a Fremont irrigation feature in southern Utah provides an example from whic...
A Fremont culture tooled vessel, intrusive into the Pueblo culture Coombs site. Height is approximat...
63 pages : illustrations (some color), maps ; 26 cm.The Fort Sage Drift Fence is one of the largest ...
Archaeologists describe the Uinta Fremont (A.D. 0 – 1300) as a mixed foraging-farming society that u...
A collection of incised stones from Western Utah was recently loaned by amateur collectors to the Ut...
The Fremont of the Great Basin and Colorado Plateau represent a diverse group of foragers and farmer...
thesisThe information resultant from three years of excavation at the Evans Mound (42In40) are used ...
The primary purpose of this article is to present new data regarding igneous toolstone use patterns ...
Sixty rock art elements and styles found in Utah can be grouped into Geometric, Representational, an...
Thesis (Ph.D.), Anthropology, University of New MexicoThis dissertation focuses on the development o...