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The Whiskey Dick Shellmound, Washington

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Earl H. Swanson*
Affiliation:
Idaho State College Museum, Pocatello, Idaho

Abstract

A layer of shells covered by a mixed aeolian and alluvial deposit was exposed by a road cut in a tributary of the Columbia River. Three occupation levels contained few stone tools, including burins and large knives in the lowest level. A contracting-stem point in the middle level places the site in the Frenchman Springs III phase, 4th to 11th centuries A.D. The latest level reflects increasing aridity; the streams became intermittent and the population moved to the main river.

Type
Facts and Comments
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for American Archaeology 1959

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References

Leakey, L. S. B. 1954 Working Stone, Bone, and Wood. In A History of Technology, Vol. 1, edited by Singer, Charles, Holmyard, E. J., and Hall, A. R., pp. 128–43. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar
Swanson, E. H. 1956 Archaeological Studies in the Vantage Region of the Columbia Plateau. MS, doctoral dissertation, University of Washington, Seattle.Google Scholar
Swanson, E. H. 1958 The Schaake Village Site in Central Washington. American Antiquity, Vol. 23, No. 2, pp. 161–71. Salt Lake City. Google Scholar