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The Prehistoric Sites at Choke Canyon Reservoir, Southern Texas: Results of Phase II Archaeological Investigations

机译:得克萨斯州南部扼流峡谷水库的史前遗址:II期考古调查结果

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摘要

Reported in this volume are the results of archaeological investigations at 72 prehistoric sites located in the basin of Choke Canyon Reservoir on the Frio River in Live Oak and McMullen Counties, southern Texas. The sites investigated in this study will be affected in one way or another by a lake formed after construction of Choke Canyon Dam, a project of the United States Bureau of Reclamation CUSBR). The research was sponsored by the USBR as the second and final phase of a two-stage program of archaeological investigations designed to mitigate damage or destruction of cultural resources resulting from dam construction and subsequent long-term inundation of a large area of the Frio River valley. Methods used to study Choke Canyonu27s prehistoric sites during the Phase II investigation were various types of subsurface excavations, documentation of surface features and characteristics, and collection of artifacts from site surfaces. The people who inhabited the Choke Canyon region in prehistoric times, representing an approximate span of 10,000 years, existed as mobile hunter/gatherer bands. They subsisted by tapping virtually every conceivable source of edible natural food. A full spectrum of animals, from lowly field mice and lizards up to bison and deer, was exploited by various techniques of hunting, trapping, and catching. Large land snails and mussels were sources of meat food that Choke Canyonu27s prehistoric people could easily gather. Gar, drum, and turtles were taken from local creeks, sloughs, and the river, perhaps using spears, nets, or weirs. Analysis of vertebrate faunal remains, results of which are presented herein, rather conclusively demonstrates that Late Prehistoric people exploited big game species more commonly than did their Archaic period predecessors. Floral products must also have comprised a substantial portion of the foods consumed by Choke Canyonu27s prehistoric inhabitants. Direct evidence of plant food utilization is nonexistent on the sites. However, the very common occurrence of sandstone manes and metates implies heavy reliance on seeds, nuts, or beans. Also, the tremendous amount of burned rock that accumulated in Archaic components at many sites, often found as very carefully constructed hearth features, suggests that baking or roasting activities were extremely common. Roots, tubers, stalks, and other edible plant parts may have been what was being prepared in these facilities. Diagnostic artifacts recovered from prehistoric sites at Choke Canyon during the various phases of archaeological investigation clearly indicate that the general vicinity witnessed aboriginal activity from Paleo-Indian times up through the early Historic period. Evidence of Paleo-Indian people is limited to surface finds along the valley margin and on high, ancient terrace formations down in the river valley. No in situ subsurface Paleo-Indian components have yet been isolated at Choke Canyon. Where previously the earliest subsurface component known at Choke Canyon dated to the Middle Archaic period (ca. 3400 B.C. to 2400 B.C.), the Phase II excavations led to discovery of an Early Archaic component dating to the period from 5000 B.C. xi to 4000 B.C. While recognizable Paleo-Indian, Early Archaic, and Middle Archaic components are relatively scarce, the Late Archaic and Late Prehistoric periods are amply represented in the prehistoric sites at Choke Canyon. Phase II investigations also produced the first clear indication of an aboriginal component containing evidence of contact with Anglo-Europeans in early historic times. The bulk of cultural, paleobotanical, and vertebrate faunal data representing the prehistory of Choke Canyon indicates that floral and faunal communities and the general climatic regime remained essentially unchanged from at least 4000 B.C. up to the period in historic times when certain livestock and land management practices led to a drastic expansion of brush communities and severe erosion of formerly stable land surfaces.
机译:该卷报道的是在得克萨斯州南部橡树郡和麦穆伦县弗里奥河River谷峡谷水库盆地的72个史前遗址的考古调查结果。在这项研究中调查的遗址将以一种方式或另一种方式受到在美国开垦局CUSBR的项目扼流峡谷大坝建设后形成的湖泊的影响。该研究是由USBR赞助的,是考古研究两阶段计划的第二个也是最后一个阶段,旨在减轻由于水坝建设和随后的弗里奥河谷大面积长期淹没而造成的文化资源的破坏或破坏。 。在第二阶段调查期间研究Ch牛峡谷史前遗址的方法是各种类型的地下挖掘,表面特征和特征的文档记录以及从遗址表面收集的文物。在史前时期居住在扼流峡谷地区的人们大约有10,000年的时间,他们以流动的猎人/采集者乐队的形式存在。他们通过挖掘几乎所有可能的食用天然食品来生存。各种各样的动物,从低地老鼠和蜥蜴到野牛和鹿,都通过各种狩猎,诱捕和捕捉技术加以利用。大块的蜗牛和贻贝是肉类食物的来源,Ch谷峡谷的史前人们可以轻易地收集它们。 ,鼓和海龟都是从当地的小溪,泥沼和河流中提取的,也许是用矛,网或堰来捕获的。对脊椎动物区系动物遗体的分析(在此给出结果)相当有力地表明,史前晚期的人比古代时期的人类更广泛地利用大型猎物。在乔克峡谷史前居民食用的食物中,花卉产品还必须占很大一部分。这些地点没有直接的植物食品利用证据。但是,砂岩鬃毛和陨石的非常普遍的出现意味着严重依赖种子,坚果或豆类。此外,在许多地方,古迹中堆积的大量烧石通常被精心构造成炉膛特征,这表明烘烤或烘烤活动极为普遍。在这些设施中可能已经准备了根,块茎,茎和其他可食用植物部分。在考古研究的各个阶段从扼流谷史前遗址中发现的诊断文物清楚地表明,从古印度时期到整个历史早期,整个周边地区都见证了土著活动。古印度人的证据仅限于沿河谷边缘以及在河谷中较高的古老阶地上的地表发现。 oke节峡谷还没有孤立的地下古印度成分。以前在扼流峡谷已知的最早的地下构造可追溯到中古时代(约公元前3400年至公元前2400年),第二阶段的发掘导致发现了可追溯到公元前5000年的早期古遗址。西至公元前4000年尽管可识别的古印度,早期古纪和中古纪的组成部分相对稀缺,但在oke克峡谷的史前遗址中却充分体现了古代末期和史前晚期。第二阶段的调查还首次发现了原住民成分,其中包含在历史早期与英裔欧洲人接触的证据。代表Ch牛峡谷史前的大量文化,古植物和脊椎动物动物数据表明,至少从公元前4000年开始,花卉和动物群落和总体气候状况基本保持不变。直到历史时期,某些牲畜和土地管理的做法导致了灌木丛的急剧扩张和对原先稳定的土地表面的严重侵蚀。

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