Matching Items (6)
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- All Subjects: Plant remains (Archaeology) Arizona
- All Subjects: Hohokam culture
- All Subjects: Palynology Sapawe Site
- Creators: Schoenwetter, James
ContributorsSchoenwetter, James (Author)
Created1969
Description
Letter report of pollen study suggests the Colorado Plateau Pollen Chronology
ContributorsSchoenwetter, James (Author)
Created1970
DescriptionReport on this research has been lost, though pollen observed forms are filed with the site archaeological records.
ContributorsSchoenwetter, James (Author)
Created1973
DescriptionStudy of the archaeological record of 6 test pits to identify a recommended mitigation strategy for the site.
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 surface sample control research effort that cannot be justified as site-focussed cultural resources management.
ContributorsSchoenwetter, James (Author)
Created1980
Description
Major study intended as the draft of a chapter in a report on the archaeological mitigation program for a populous Hohokam village in the Salt River Valley, Arizona. Though the study generated an unusually large body of well controlled archaeological-context palynological data, it did not result in the discovery of new information about Hohokam prehistory. Assessments of this failure, however, led to significant methodological lessons for archaeological pollen studies.
ContributorsSchoenwetter, James (Author)
Created1965
DescriptionUnpublished report, 1965
Discusses local vegetation patterns, modern pollen/vegetation relationships, pollen sequence and chronology for the site, correspondence of ceramic-dated pollen horizons at this site with those elsewhere in the SW, cultural ecological implications of the pollen record, and plant resource availability during prehistoric occupation.
Discusses local vegetation patterns, modern pollen/vegetation relationships, pollen sequence and chronology for the site, correspondence of ceramic-dated pollen horizons at this site with those elsewhere in the SW, cultural ecological implications of the pollen record, and plant resource availability during prehistoric occupation.