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New Deal Archaeology in Tennessee - Intellectual, Methodological, and Theoretical Contributions (Paperback)
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New Deal Archaeology in Tennessee - Intellectual, Methodological, and Theoretical Contributions (Paperback)
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New Deal Archaeology in Tennessee is a collection of essays that
explore how contemporary archaeology was catalyzed and shaped by
the archaeological revolution during the New Deal era. New Deal
Archaeology in Tennessee tells the engrossing story of Southeastern
archaeology in the 1930s. The Tennessee Valley Authority Act of May
1933 initiated an ambitious program of flood control and power
generation by way of a chain of hydroelectric dams on the Tennessee
River. The construction of these dams flooded hundreds of thousands
of square miles of river bottoms, campsites, villages, and towns
that had been homes to Native Americans for centuries. This
triggered an urgent need to undertake extensive archaeological
fieldwork throughout the region. Those studies continue to
influence contemporary archaeology. The state of Tennessee and the
Tennessee Valley were especially well suited research targets
thanks to their mild climate and long field seasons. A third
benefit in the 1930s was the abundance of labor supplied by
Tennesseans unemployed during the Great Depression. Within months
of the passage of the Tennessee Valley Authority Act, teams of
archaeologists fanned out across the state and region under the
farsighted direction of Smithsonian Institution curators Neil M.
Judd, Frank H. H. Roberts, and Frank M. Setzler. The early months
of 1934 would become the busiest period of archaeological fieldwork
in US history. The twelve insightful essays in New Deal Archaeology
in Tennessee document and explore this unique peak in
archaeological study. Chapters highlight then-new techniques such
as mound 'peeling' and stratigraphic excavation adapted from the
University of Chicago; the four specific New Deal sites of Watts
Bar Reservoir, Mound Bottom, Pack, and Chickamauga Basin;
bioarchaeology in the New Deal; and the enduring impact of the New
Deal on contemporary fieldwork. The challenges of the 1930s in
recruiting skilled labor, training unskilled ancillary labor,
developing and improvising new field methods, and many aspects of
archaeological policies, procedures, and best-practices laid much
of the foundation of contemporary archaeological practice. New Deal
Archaeology in Tennessee offers an invaluable record of that
pivotal time for professional, student, and amateur archaeologists.
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