Northwest Anthropological Research Notes


Book Description

Editorial Sedentism on the Columbia Plateau: A Matter of Degree Related to the Easy and Efficient Procurement of Resources - E. S. Lohse and D. Sammons-Lohse The Bandon Burials--Symposium 1. The Bandon Case (35-CS-43C): Applying the Oregon Burial Law - Dick Ross 2. A Bandon Perspective on Site 35-CS-43C - Betty Lindon-Vogel and Roberta L. Hall 3. Faunal Remains and Artifacts from Bandon, Oregon, Site 35-CS-43C - Lee W. Lindsay, Jr. and Anthony R. Keith 4. Analysis of a Sea Mammal Canine Pendant - Mariana L. Mace 5. Skeletal Population at 35-CS-43C, May, 1986 - Roberta L. Hall Microdebitage Analysis in Activity Analysis, An Application - Elizabeth D. Vance Native American Religious Use in the Pacific Northwest: A Case Study from the Mt. Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest - Madonna L. Moss Coast Salish Social Organization and Economic Redistribution - William R. Belcher Flora Present at the Pierce, Idaho, Chinese Mining Site, 10-CW-436 - Priscilla Wegars Comments on the Distribution of Folsom Points in Eastern Oregon and Southern Idaho - Mark G. Plew and Daniel S. Meatte Cultural Resource Management and the Oregon Bibliographic File System - Leland Gilson




Research Design for the Chief Joseph Dam Cultural Resources Project


Book Description

"This document summarizes the research goals and strategy of intensive data recovery performed by the University of Washington Office of Public Archaeology at the Chief Joseph Dam Project in north-central Washington state, 1978-1985. ... The introductory chapter discusses the scientific and humanistic concerns which guide cultural resource management for the project and the specific objectives of this phase of data recovery. Background information on the environment, Native American inhabitants and previous archaeological work in the area is provided in three separate chapters. The remainder of the report emphasizes strategic and tactical decisions made in data collection and analysis. The method of site selection, the sampling designs used at individual sites, and the excavation techniques used are reported"--Page iii.










Prehistoric Exchange Systems in North America


Book Description

In this unique volume, archaeologists examine the changing economic structure of trade in North America over a period of 6,000 years. Organined by geographical and chronological divisions, each chapter focuses on trade in one of nine regions from the Arachiac through the late prehistoric period. Each contribution explores neighboring areas to llustrate the complexity of North American exchange. By charting the econmic structure of these regions, archaeologists, economic anthropologists, and economic geographers gain greater insight into the dynamics of North American trade and exchange on a continental wide basis.