Matching Items (5)
Filtering by

Clear all filters

ContributorsSchoenwetter, James (Author)
Created1976
Description
Pilot study to assess the type of archaeological-context pollen samples most likely to yield results commensurate with investment. Results suggest floor sediment and floor feature fill deposits will yield better data for developing a pollen sequence than floor contact deposits. Paleoenvironmental reconstruction, however, will require financial support for a major

Pilot study to assess the type of archaeological-context pollen samples most likely to yield results commensurate with investment. Results suggest floor sediment and floor feature fill deposits will yield better data for developing a pollen sequence than floor contact deposits. Paleoenvironmental reconstruction, however, will require financial support for a major surface sample control research effort that cannot be justified as site-focussed cultural resources management.
67413-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsSchoenwetter, James (Author)
Created1974
Description

Unpublished report, 1974.

Summary of the observations and conclusions drawn from pollen studies of surface samples, core samples from Calimus Lake.

67410-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsSchoenwetter, James (Author)
Created1973
DescriptionDraft version of the chapter published in Mount et. al.
67405-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsSchoenwetter, James (Author)
Created1971
DescriptionResults of pilot pollen study suggests further research would be relevant to on-going and planned archaeological study at this site. Also see unpublished report of subsequent palynological research 1974.
67439-Thumbnail Image.png
ContributorsSchoenwetter, James (Author)
Created1981
Description

Argues that the canons of evidence that apply to artifactual evidence of prehistoric behavior patterns are sometimes distinct from those that apply to non-artifactual evidence, and the logic and archaeological value of the latter is not less simply because it is different. The essay is intended to instruct and sensitise

Argues that the canons of evidence that apply to artifactual evidence of prehistoric behavior patterns are sometimes distinct from those that apply to non-artifactual evidence, and the logic and archaeological value of the latter is not less simply because it is different. The essay is intended to instruct and sensitise archaeologists to this issue as much as it is to allay concern that the pollen evidence for Archaic maize cultivation at the Koster site may not be credible. 49 p. Also see Schoenwetter 1994