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Archaeological Data Recovery in the Piceance and Wyoming Basins of Northwestern Colorado and Southwestern Wyoming (Paperback)
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Archaeological Data Recovery in the Piceance and Wyoming Basins of Northwestern Colorado and Southwestern Wyoming (Paperback)
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In the United States of America, Section 106 of the National
Historic Preservation Act requires that projects funded,
authorized, or permitted by the federal government consider
historic properties that may be affected by the development of
those projects. To comply with Section 106, an interstate pipeline
corridor in southwestern Wyoming and northwestern Colorado was
surveyed to identify cultural resources and to evaluate them in
terms of significance and potential listing in the National
Register of Historic Places. Once sites were identified, a
mitigation strategy was developed in coordination with the Bureau
of Land Management. That plan prioritized important cultural
resources within a regional archaeological context and included
substantial excavations at 14 sites. The archaeological excavations
were successful in recovering the types of data necessary to
address regional research issues that were raised in the project's
alternative mitigation plan. The data recovery effort included
site-specific geophysical assessments as well as providing an
opportunity to analyze the geology, fauna, flora, and tens of
thousands of prehistoric and historical artifacts from the sites.
While there is nothing about the number of artifacts that
inherently adds to our understandings of past lifeways, the
analyses substantially added to regional datasets for the
Paleoindian, Archaic, Formative, Protohistoric, and Historical
components. Specifically, the analyses addressed prehistoric
chronometric and settlement patterns (Chapter 5), subsistence
strategies (Chapter 6), lithic reduction strategies (Chapter 7), as
well as synthesizing information for prehistoric hearths (Chapter
8) and architecture (Chapter 9). Chapter 10 focuses on the results
of remote sensing at two sites. That is followed by regional
syntheses of the prehistoric (Chapter 11) and historical data
(Chapter 12). When combined with existing datasets, this synthetic
work substantially improves the quality of regional archaeological
interpretations. Given the results presented herein, it is clear
that the mitigation approach within the pipeline corridor was
successful in providing important archaeological information that
advances local and regional understandings of past lifeways.
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