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Experiences in the University of Washington Anthropology Department, 1955–1991 - Simon Ottenberg The Undervalued Black Katy Chitons (Katharina Tunicata) as a Shellfish Resource on the Northwest Coast of North America - Dale R. Croes Incised Stones from Idaho - Jan Snedden Kee and Mark G. Plew A Partial Stratigraphy of the Snakelum Point Site, 45-IS-13, Island County, Washington, and Comment on the Sampling of Shell Midden Sites Using Small Excavation Units - Lance K. Wollwage, Guy L. Tasa, and Stephenie Kramer Big Dog/Little Horse—Ethnohistorical and Linguistic Evidence for the Changing Role of Dogs on the Mid-And-Lower Columbia in the Nineteenth Century - Cheryl A. Mack Smallpox, Aleuts, and Kayaks: A Translation of Eduard Blaske’s 1838 Article about his Trip through the Aleutian Islands - Eduard Blashke, with Introduction, Annotation, and Translation by Richard L. Bland The 66th Annual Northwest Anthropological Conference, Portland, Oregon, 27–30 March 2013
Proceedings of the XV World Congress UISPP Lisbon, 4-9 September 2006 Volume 14, Session C54 Series Editor: Luiz Oosterbeek
The Beaver Creek Shelter (39CU779) is a north-facing rock shelter in Wind Cave National Park. Excavations were conducted by the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology in 1985 and, again by that institution and the South Dakota Archaeological Research Center in 1985 and 1987. This work penetrated 4.77 m of vertical rock shelter sediments. The excavations defined 22 stratigraphic horizons, many of which contain archeological materials, and produced a sequence of 12 radiocarbon dates covering most of the Holocene. The archeological specimens, the stratifications, and the radiocarbon dates indicate the shelter has the potential of providing information on the transition from the Early to the Middle Archaic Periods, and of elucidating the interrelationship between climatic trends and human prehistory throughout the Holocene.