Archaeological Studies in The Cortez District, 1982: Bureau of Land Management
Archaeological Studies in The Cortez District, 1982: Bureau of Land Management
Archaeological Studies in The Cortez District, 1982: Bureau of Land Management
NEVADA
Donold L. Hardesty
Eugene M. Hattori
TECHNICAL R E P O R T NO. 12
RENO, NEVADA
w 1983
FORE WARD
Richard C . Hanes
Nevada BLM State Archaeologist
Reno
December , 1983
ARCHAEOLOGICAL STUDIES IN THE CORTEZ MINING DISTRICT
1982
bY
Donald L. Hardesty (University o f Nevada-Reno)
and
Prepared By
Department o f Anthropology
University o f Nevada
Reno, Nevada
Prepared For
Bureau o f Land Management
Battle Mountain D i s t r i c t
Battl e Mountain, Nevada
CONTRACT NUMBER NV-060-CT-2-4
August 1983
'I
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION 1
Pinyon-Juniper 8
1. Locus 1-2 a
2. LOCUS 1-3 a
3. LOCUS 1-4 8
4, LOCUS 1-5 a
5. LOCUS 4-1 11
6. LOCUS C-1 11
Ore Body 11
1. LOCUS A-3 11
2. LOCUS 2-4 13
1. Locus 1-1 13
2. LOCUS 4-2 13
3. Locus 4-3 14
4. Locus 2-1 14
5. Locus 2-2 14
6. LOCUS 2-3 14
7. LOCUS 3-1 16
8. LOCUS 3-2 16
9. LOCUS A-1 16
1 . Locus €-I 17
2. LOCUS E-2 17
3. LOCUS F-1 17
4. LOCUS F-2 17
7” LOCUS A-2 18
Dugout S-42 25
Adobes
Adobe S-9 26
Adobe S-73 27
Adobe 5-43 28
Pits 29
P i t P-2 29
Artifacts 30
Cel adon 31
Four Seasons 31
Swatow 34
Chinese Brownware 34
Container L i d 39
Opium Pipe Bowl 40
John Edwards Ironstone 40
Ironstone with Dark Red Transfer P r i n t 40
White Clay Tobacco Pipes 40
Chinese Opium Containers 41
EuroAmerican Arnmuni t i o n 41
Acculturation 46
Conspicuous Consumption 61
Temperance 62
Rationality and Order 63
Conclusions 64
LITERATURE CITED 65
1
LIST OF FI GURES
t
in archaeological methods. Hardesty and Eugene M. Hattori (Oesert Research
I n s t i t u t e ) supervised the work; Laurel Cri ttenden and Mary Panel 1 i a s s i s t e d ,
Members o f the field team included Leslie H i l l , Jessica Price, Terry
Hol 1and , and Cathy Ful kerson.
1
annual meeting of the Society f o r Historical Archaeology in Denver,
Colorado. A t the same meeting, Donald L. Hardesty and Eugene M . Hattori
presented the paper "An Archaeological Model of Victorianism on the Nevada
M i n i n g Frontier." The chapter by the same name i n t h i s report i s a revised
version o f t h a t paper.
Many people contributed t o this project. The authors particularly
wish t o thank Roberta McGonagle and Tony Lesperance f o r t h e i r assistance.
2
RESULTS OF THE 1982 ARCHAEOLOGICAL SURVEY
for the district, a team o f UNR students and the Principal Investigator
conducted a systematic field survey of archaeological s i t e s in part o f the
! district. The survey covered approximately ten percent of the pinyon-
juniper and alluvial bottomland zones. Together, these zones make up
the vast majority o f the Cortez district. In addition, some survey work
was done on the periphery o f the settlement o f Upper Cortez, the largest
gravity center in the district. The primary purpose of the 1982 survey was
to collect information about settlement patterns and other historic land
Y
3
f i e l d survey t o c o l l e c t a larger sample.
SURVEY DESIGN
same reasons, a circular quadrat was used t o survey the region around
Upper Cortet .
Another practical f i e l d problem w i t h designing a f i e l d survey i s
translating a theoretical sampling framework i n t o something t h a t has ground
workability. Perhaps most d i f f i c u l t i s conducting a survey in a forested
region such as our pinyon-juniper zone. The presence o f cleared mining
claim l i n e s i n the Cortez d i s t r i c t made the job somewhat easier. These
lines are quite visible on the ground and a r e oriented approximately
4
north-south and east-west; furthermore, they a r e spaced about 1,000 f e e t
apart i n a grid-like system t h a t can be treated as "unbiased" f o r purposes
of an archaeological survey. For this reason, the l i n e a r transects used
t o survey the pinyon-juniper and alluvial f l a t s zones follow the m i n i n g
claim l i n e s . Figure 1 shows the location of the transects. The f o u r claim
lines closest t o Upper Cortez i n both a north-south and an east-west direction
were selected as transects. Transects 1-4 were the north-south claim
markers. The f i r s t two (1 and 2 ) were surveyed by teams o f two; each
member of the team walked 50 f e e t away from opposite sides of the claim l i n e .
Transects 3 and 4 were surveyed by a two-member team walking 50 f e e t apart
-
on the same side of the claim marker and then returning on the opposfte
side, making a t o t a l transect w i d t h o f 200 f e e t . Transects A-D were the
east-west claim markers. All o f these were surveyed by teams of two; each
member o f the team walked 50 f e e t from opposite sides o f the transect. The
t o t a l transect w i d t h was therefore 100 f e e t .
8
charcoal and ash. The entire p i t is about 16 yards by 17 yards i n size
and i s approximately c i r c u l a r . As i n the other charcoal features, no
a r t i f a c t s are associated.
5. Locus 4-1 (Figure 6 ) . J u s t e a s t o f the claim l i n e marking Transect
4 and a t i t s i n t e r s e c t i o n w i t h cross-road 6 is a r a t h e r extensive trash
s c a t t e r associated w i t h a recent d r i l l hole f o r geophysical prospecting.
The s c a t t e r covers an area o f around 100 f e e t by 100 f e e t . I t includes
such f e a t u r e s as a d r i l l hole, a charcoal s c a t t e r , a graded road, and a
v a r i e t y o f portable a r t i f a c t s associated w i t h domestic a c t i v i t i e s . Perhaps
most diagnostic, however,-is a wooden post a t one edge o f the s c a t t e r upon
which the following information is attached: "Oct. 25 t o Nov. 9 , 1964,
Contract 14230902195, Docket One 6350, Cortez J o i n t Venture."
6, Locus C-1 (Domestic trash s c a t t e r ) . The only evidence o f human
occupation located by Hardesty and Hili i n t r a n s e c t C was a moderately-
sized (70 feet by 35 f e e t ) a r t i f a c t scatter about 500 feet below the
t a i l i n g s flow from the Consolidated Cortez m i l l . Barrel hoops, tobacco
cans, and a v a r i e t y o f hole-in-the-top cans were observed. A late 19th
century occupation i s suggested.
Ore Body
-
1. Locus A-3 (Adit). A t the t o p ( e a s t ) end o f Transect A was located
a group o f two a d i t s w i t h associated i n d u s t r i a l t r a s h . One o f the a d i t s
was f i t t e d w i t h a door and a corrugated metal r o o f over the entrance; the
other was supported by a framework of heavy timbers. Several stone s t r u c t u r e s
were associated, including what appears t o be a rock dam i n the gully below
the roofed a d i t and a domestic house foundation j u s t n o r t h o f the other
adit. Domestic a r t i f a c t s i n the v i c i n i t y o f the house s t r u c t u r e include
11
food cans, and barrel hoops. Below the a d i t s are a ladder made w i t h wire
n a i l s and a retaining wall f o r what appears t o be a railroad grade w i t h
some t i e s s t i l l i n place.
2. Locus 2-4 (Domestic Structure). Near the end of Transect 2
was located an h i s t o r i c house foundation associated w i t h a variety o f
13
an area o f about 16 by 16 yards and i s situated i n a mixed sagebrush and
pinyon-juniper ecotone. Associated a r t i f a c t s include several fragments
of Four Seasons earthenware, hole-in-top cans, green glass beads, a t a l c
can, a t o p o f a kerosene can, and a variety of other domestic items. The
feature may extend much further south.
3. Locus 4-3 (Domestic Trash Scatter) (Figure 9 ) . Between Upper
Cortez and Activity Locus 4-2 was located another domestic t r a s h s c a t t e r
i n Transect 4 b u t without any evidence of Chinese a f f i l i a t i o n . The
feature i s quite large, covering an area o f perhaps 45 by 24 yards oriented
in a north-south direction. A heavy concentration o f purple glass bottle
fragments suggests an early 20th century date for the s c a t t e r . Such
domestic a r t i f a c t s a s clocks, ironstone pottery, chamberpots (enameled
metal) , sanitary seam food cans, tobacco cans, and log cabin syrup cans
are i n the vicinity.
4. Locus 2-1 (Domestic Trash S c a t t e r ) . The f i r s t s i t e located in
transect 2 was somewhat l e s s than 400 f e e t from the road going up t o the
Garrison Mine and w i t h i n the Upper Cortez Gravity Center zone. Covering
an area o f about 36 f e e t square, the s i t e i s a s c a t t e r of sanitary milk
cans and some glass b o t t l e fragments. L i t t l e was observed t h a t could be
used f o r dating, b u t a t u r n o f the century date i s suggested.
5. Locus 2-2 (Domestic Trash S c a t t e r ) . Nearly 550 f e e t from the
Garrison Mine road i n Transect 2 , a second domestic trash s c a t t e r was
located. This s i t e i s approximately 30 f e e t i n diameter a n d , a s w i t h locus
i 2-1, consists mostly of t u r n of the century milk cans and "purple" glass.
6. Locus 2-3 (Domestic Structure). The t h i r d s i t e in Transect 2
was located almost 900 f e e t from the Garrison Mine road and just below the
haul road. Unlike the other two i n this transect, locus 2-3 i s quite
14
extensive, covering an area o v e r 75 f e e t square, and a wide variety o f
a r t i f a c t s was observed. Inc7uded a r e a number o f f l a t t e n e d kerosene cans
w i t h nail holes (probably used f o r roofing or siding m a t e r i a l ) , window
g l a s s g "purple" b o t t l e g l a s s , rubber shoe soles, and turn o f the century
milk cans. Scattered wood fragments, along w i t h the flattened cans,
suggest the remains o f a s t r u c t u r e . The probable date i s e a r l y 20th
century .
7. Locus 3-1 (Domestic Trash S c a t t e r ) . About halfway between t h e
f i r s t crossroad and the haul road i n Transect 3 , Panelli and Siegler
located a small domestic trash s c a t t e r . As w i t h the Transect 2 s c a t t e r s ,
the s i t e consists' mostly of turn o f the century milk cans and "purple"
b o t t l e g l a s s , along w i t h what appears t o be somewhat e a r l i e r wine b o t t l e
glass and hole-in-top cans. The 20 f e e t by 50 f e e t s c a t t e r i s estimated
60 f e e t s c a t t e r is e a r l y 2 0 t h century.
10. Locus B-1 (Domestic Trash S c a t t e r ) . J u s t below the t a i l i n g s
flow from the Consolidated Cortez i n i l l , Panelli and Siegler l o c a t e d an
extensive trash scatter t h a t extended f r o m the tailings a71 the way t o
16
Upper Cortez. The s c a t t e r consists of t i n cans, glass bottles, and a
variety o f o t h e r domestic trash--apparently originating i n several time
periods from the early 2 0 t h century on.
Alluvial Flats
1. Locus E-1 (Domestic Structure). Sennett-Wal ker surveyed t h e
alluvial bottomland area j u s t below Upper Cortez, w h i c h has been designated
Quadrats E and F. Q u a d r a t E includes the sagebrush zone between the pinyon-
juniper f o r e s t a n d the main road t o Upper Cortez from the Grass Valley
road, extending from Transect A t o Transect D. Locus E-1 i s a domestic
structure located within t h i s q u a d r a t . I t consists of two s t a n d i n g stone
buildings associated with t r a s h s c a t t e r s made u p of hole-in-top cans, beer
bottle glass, and cobalt b l u e bottle glass. The estimated d a t e o f occupation
i s l a t e 1 9 t h century.
2. Locus E-2 (Domestic Structure). Also in Q u a d r a t E was a standing
adobe structure near Transect C . The building has an i n t e r i o r wooden
frame and a r o o f made partly of corrugated t i n and partly o f a thatch-like
material. Wire nails were used in construction, suggesting a 2 0 t h
century date, b u t no other temporally d i a g n o s t i c a r t i f a c t s were observed.
3. Locus F-1 (Domestic Structure). Sennett-Wal ker surveyed Q u a d r a t
F, which i s the sagebrush zone extending from Transect 1 t o Transect 4 in
17
broom handle. Another early 2 0 t h century occupation i s suggested f o r t h i s
65 f e e t by 50 f e e t s c a t t e r .
Consolidated Cortez -
Mill Gravity Center
1. Locus A-2 (Industrial Trash S c a t t e r ) . Panel1 i and Siegler located
an extensive s c a t t e r of industrial trash just below the intersection of the
haul road with Transect A . The s c a t t e r was made u p o f cyanide can l i d s ,
barrel hoops, pulleys, canvas fragments, and a variety o f other industrial
a r t i f a c t s , along with such domestic trash a s sanitary cans, l i g h t green
wine bottle glass fragments, machine-made b o t t l e s , and the l i k e , Locus A-2
probably dates t o the operation o f the Consolidated Cortez mill i n the
1920's.
18
et -
in the Truckee Basin of the California Sierra Nevada (Elston - a1 1981,
1982) and in the Continental Divide o f Colorado (Buckles 1978) provide
relevant d a t a . According t o these studies, charcoal making involves a
complex set of human a c t i v i t i e s t h a t may vary according t o s t y l e , time and
function. Such v a r i a t i o n occurs mostly in t h e form of the technology. A
general model of the process stipulates t h a t charcoal i s created by stacking
cordwood around an i n t e r i o r "chimney" and covering the s t a c k . The stack
i s then fired and the rate of burning controlled by means of d r a f t holes
in the outer cover. Archaeological v i s i b i l i t y of this a c t i v i t y comes f r o m
the non-combustible residue (charcoal and a s h ) , the outer cover (clay and
other ''skin" fragments or a brick or rock structure), and landscape
engineering (e-g., a r t i f i c i a l levelling o r the preparation of a p i t )
S t y l i s t i c variation in this general model may originate in ethnicity.
Buckles (1978:887-892) finds historical evidence f o r ethnic differences in
the shape of European charcoal p i t s . British p i t s were usually r o u n d , a n d
similar shapes have been reported in France, Germany, Bohemia, Bavaria,
a n d Sweden. Some Swedish p i t s , however, are square or rectangular with no
supporting framework. Finally, charcoal p i t s in Austria are long and
rectangular w i t h a wooden framework t o support the s t a c k , similar t o much
e a r l i e r Roman p i t s . Whether shape can be used a s an ethnic marker,
however, depends upon a number of things. In t h e f i r s t place, shape may
have functional o r temporal correlates, although we a r e presently unaware
o f data supporting t h i s viewpoint. A t the same time, i t does n o t sepm
illogical t o assume t h a t the structure o f stacked cordwood would have some
functional relationship t o p i t shape. Secondly, s t y l i s t i c variation in p i t
shape may originate in the random fluctuations o f isolated social groups--
an example o f "cultural d r i f t " (Binford 1963; Cavalli-Sforza and Feldman
19
1981; Hardesty 1983). And, f i n a l l y , the d i s t i n c t i v e shape o f one ethnic
group may be "adopted" by another. A possible example comes from the
20
as a r i v e r o r primary road. Pits are a much more mobile technology. They
are b u i l t specifically t o process small patches of woods a n d , as a r e s u l t ,
are much more geographically dispersed t h a n kilns. And, s i n c e l o g movement
i s unnecessary, p i t s a r e usually n o t expected t o be found next t o major
transportation routes. Otherwise, b o t h pits and kilns are likely t o be
located on naturally f l a t o r a r t i f i c i a l l y levelled terrain i n wooded areas.
Buck1 es (1 g78:905-908) interprets the differences between charcoal
p i t s and kilns a s economic in origin. In t h i s functional explanation,
21
determine whether o r n o t time i s a better explanation t h a n function t o
account for the observable differences in charcoal making technology.
Buckles (1978: 893-894) a l s o proposes an "age-area" model t o predict time
v a r i a t i o n among charcoal pits in the vicinity o f Leidville, Colorado.
His assumption i s t h a t the f i r s t p i t s were b u i l t closest t o the mill o r
other place o f consumption. Then, as the f o r e s t i s gradually c u t , l a t e r
p i t s are b u i l t further and further away. Such a time series may be
appropriate f o r the Cortez region.
From the preceding general model o f charcoal making behavior emerges
a specific model f o r the Cortez m i n i n g d i s t r i c t . The model includes
s t y l i s t i c , functional, and temporal processes o f v a r i a b i l i t y i n archaeological
sites. Documentary history suggests t h a t b o t h I t a l i a n and Mexican workers
were involved in making charcoal a t Cortez, perhaps w i t h the former being
22
making sites in the Cortez district are expected to be o f the pit type,
mostly because o f t h e rugged terrain and absence o f major transportation
routes through the pinyon-juniper forest. F o r this reason, archaeological
23
1982 SHOSHONE WELLS EXCAVATIONS
DUGOUTS
Dugout -
S-35.
This structure i s a nearly square depression excavated i n t o a s l i g h t
rise. The entrance e x i t i s e a s t t o west and i s 5 meters (m) in length.
Width i s approximately 4.5m and parallels the slope. A lm x lrn t e s t p i t
the data are extremely few, we tentatively place the age o f t h i s structure a t
24
between 1880-1905. The ethnic a f f i l i a t i o n i s Chinese a t some time during
i t s use.
Dugout -
S-42
was then extended 50 crn t o the west. This mass appears t o be a naturally
occurring formation, w h i c h was partia ly excavated in the construction of
the structure. I t was also necessary t o extend the trench southward about
SO cm t o expose the d u g o u t wall. D u r ng the excavation o f the f i l l , a
series o f confusing, undulating s t r a t a was uncovered by the excavators.
Upon closer examination i t was determined t h a t this was in actuality a
collapsed adobe wall a t the front o f the structure.
Many of the adobe bricks are carbonized on one o r more surfaces.
Furtheryore, the probable mortar f o r the bricks has a reddish hue i n -
dicative of high temperature a l t e r a t i o n coincident w i t h burning. I t is
our belief t h a t a portion o f t h i s wall was a collapsed ehirnney and fireplace
situated just inside the structure door. T h a t t h i s probably does n o t
represent a burned structure i s deduced f r o m the l a c k o f large amounts
of charcoal and the unburned nature of the leather, cloth, and composite
artifacts. Rocks and a few odd sized red clay bricks were recovered in the
i n diameter, were situated near the entryway. Only one of these, however,
appears t o have contained a p o s t . One hole contained decayed wood, while
25
the other one was much shallower and was f i l l e d w i t h the occupation s u r f a c e
fill. The holes were originally excavated w i t h a rod-like digging t o o l ,
whose impressions a r e preserved on t h e hole walls. Culturally and
temporally diagnostic a r t i f a c t s recovered from the floor surface include
Four Seasons ceramics and c u t nails (cut nails 79% and wire nails 2 1 % ) .
A t l e a s t two barrel hoops were recovered toward the center of the
structure j u s t above the floor surface. This may represent a piece of
furniture, a wall construction element, or a r o o f vent.
This structure was probably constructed by the Chinese around the
turn of the century. Distinguishing features include an excavated trench
into a s l i g h t r i s e with backfill placed around the edges. The sidewalls
were reinforced by use of dry laid rock a n d c l a y b r i c k . Partial s u p p o r t
for the roof was probably achieved by use of p o s t s near the dugout's
entrance. These roof supports may have been placed on e i t h e r side o f the
entryway, b u t only one side o f the structure was tested.
ADOBES
Adobe S-9
--
T h i s adobe building i s a b o u t 4 m wide (E-W) and 5 m long (N-S).
The structure walls are constructed of two independent layers of adobe
bricks, which measure a b o u t 12" x 4" x 6". Several courses o f cobble-
size stones are incorporated into the lower portions o f t h e wall and make
up the foundation. The door o f t h i s structure faced t o the e a s t .
A single, 90 cm deep 1 x 1 rn t e s t p i t was excavated into the n o r t h -
east corner o f the structure t h r o u g h the edge of a pothole. The a r f i f a c t
yield o f t h i s structure was meager, and no well-defined living surfaces
were recognized, A l a y e r o f ashy dark-stained f i l l was interpreted as a
f l o o r , b u t fragments o f adobe w i t h p l a s t e r adhering t o one surface apparently
contained below t h i s level. Diagnostic a r t i f a c t s included one fragment
26
o f Swatow pottery, 8 c u t and 6 wire n a i l s , and flattened hole-in-top can
utilized into the 20th century, i t probably dates from the 1870s o r before
and was subsequently used by l a t e r occupants.
--
Adobe 5-13
Excavation o f t h i s structure began i n 1981 and yielded an interesting
occupational record. The 1982 excavation consisted o f extending l a s t y e a r ' s
t e s t p i t one square meter t o the west. Again, a very distinctive occupational
surface associated w i t h the Chinese was revealed. Though i t was hoped t h a t
t h i s season's testing would reveal a lower, e a r l i e r , living surface, we
again were unable t o locate i t .
Among the a r t i f a c t s from the Chinese occupation layer were the
following: Chinese ceramics ( F o u r Seasons, u t i 1 i t y brown ware, and celadon) ;
a broken, red, burnished opium pipe bowl; Chinese cash ("Kang Hsi T'ung
Pao", ca. 1662-1772); a ceramic j a r l i d ; a rubber galosh ("Boston Rubber
Shoe Co./Boston, USA") ; and a brown transfer pattern ceramic platefragment.
The d a t i n g of the Chinese occupation o f t h i s structure i s estimated
a t between a b o u t 1890 and 1910. The older occupation l e f t very l i t t l e
diagnostic material, a similar situation t o S-9. A basal fragment o f an
embossed panel blue-green bottle w i t h the final l e t t e r "S" was recovered
from what we believe t o be the e a r l i e r (pre-Chinese) occupants of the
structure. As w i t h S-9, we tentatively date the construction o f t h i s
27
Adobe 5-43
I__-
PITS
P i t P-2
--
A stone lined p i t 104 cm in diameter i s located in t h e bank o f the
29
chickens. The e n t i r e skeleton from skull t o metapodials was represented,
and the birds were neither butchered nor burned. The deposits also contained
Chinese ceramics, nails (cut 36%, wire 28%, L-headed 36%), and hole-in-top
cans. The lowest level contained bones, n a i l s , and sheetmetal.
This feature was i n i t i a l l y believed t o have been a well because of
i t s location adjacent t o the drainage and i t s structure. I t must be noted,
however, t h a t the catchment area for the drainage i s relatively small,
the stream has n o t been observed carrying water during the summer, and the
area appears t o l i e outside of the Shoshone Wells aquifer drainage. The
Shoshone Wells a q u i f e r , and namesake, l i e s above, west o f , the s i t e and t o
the n o r t h about 200 m. The well next t o the Wenban house s i t e i s a t l e a s t
10 m deep within the subsurface drainage of the aquifer.
Alternatively, t h i s feature may have functioned as an oven f i l l e d
with burning wood and stones, along w i t h the material t o be cooked. After
ART1 FACTS
Artifacts recovered from the 1982 excavations a t Shoshone Wells are
tabulated in Table 2. The a r t i f a c t assemblage most commonly associated
with Overseas Chinese Culture in the West i s the ceramic container and
vessel assemblage. This group consists o f food storage and shipping jars,
as well as serving, drinking, and eating vessels. To o u r knowledge, a l l
Celadon (Figure l o a , b)
Celadon i s one o f the common ceramic types, and i t i s present, in
small numbers, throughout the Chinese p o r t i o n s o f the s i t e . These porcelain
vessel fragments include parts from cups and bowls. The celadon recovered
from the s i t e included two marked vessel bases from S-14. Both pieces have
similar f a b r i c b u t vary s l i g h t l y in c o l o r . One specimen i s a small cup
30 millimeters (mm) h i g h , 48 mm i n diameter, and w i t h a rimmed base 24 mm
in diameter. The e x t e r i o r c o l o r i s very pale green, while the i n t e r i o r
and base a r e a very l i g h t greenish gray. Within the basal ring i s a dark
b l u e Chinese character.
32
E
Swatow (Fiqure 1 Oc)
Swatow stoneware has a l i g h t bluish gray glaze with a medium t o d a r k
bluish gray design. The vessel type represented by t h i s ceramic i s a
moderately thick walled bowl h i t h a ring base. Bowl i n t e r i o r s are
decorated w i t h two c i r c l e s on the i n t e r i o r vessel wall and a comma-shaped
mark on the bottom. In addition t o one rim and three basal c i r c l e s , the
e x t e r i o r has a c h a r a c t e r i s t i c design element i n f i n e and thick blue l i n e s
interpreted as representing, and also c a l l e d , "three c i r c l e s and a dragon-
f l y " o r "blue flowers" (Praetzell is and Praetzell i s 1979:149). T h e term
"Swatow" ( S h a n t o u ) r e f e r s t o place of manufacture i n China for t h i s
Brownware (Figure 1 2 b , f )
T h i s i s the most common Chinese ceramic type a n d i s in t h e form o f
34
between about 3.5 t o 7.0 mm with variation tending toward thickness greater
t h a n 7.0 mm.
Reconstructed dimensions indicate vessels ranging in diameter between
a t l e a s t 10 and 20 cm. The majority of the identifiable fragments appear
t o be f r o m wide mouth containers and considerably fewer pots w i t h pouring
spouts.
ui
37
colored area i s incorporated into the fabric rather t h a n merely s i t t i n g
upon i t , as does the green colored area. No vessel form i s postulated f o r
t h i s fragment.
38
Pinkish-Gray Stoneware
This type i s represented by a single fragment from a f l a t bottomed
bowl o r d i s h from S-14. The unglazed exterior base i s rimmed and from
the basal curvature i t s diameter was probably about 90 mm. Basal wall
thickness i s 5.5 mm and sloping sidewall thickness i s 2 5 mm near t h e
base. Both exterior and i n t e r i o r walls are glazed with a crazed, heavy
pinkish gray material; the f l a t i n t e r i o r basal surface s a mat dark
gray. On the i n t e r i o r wall i s a small portion o f a medium bluish gray
design. Unlike the green glazed stoneware, the dark gray pigment was
not applied beneath the l i g h t e r colored glaze.
39
Opium Pipe -
Bowl
A fragmented opium pipe bowl was recovered from the floor o f S-13.
This earthenware ceramic has a highly burnished moderate reddish brown surface
and moderately orange p i n k fabric. The bowl has a flared upper rim with
the base of the f l a r e marked by an incised band. Wall thickness varies
between 3 and 4 mm. The basal portion was rounded and marked with a t l e a s t
one Chinese character, and the t o p o f the bowl was probably s l i g h t l y convex
and sharply demarcated from t h e f l a r e by a right angle. Finally, the
interior o f the bowl i s charred from use.
-
John Edwards Ironstone (Figure l l f - h )
Two fragments of a white glazed ironstone base were recovered from
5-14. A1 t h o u g h fragmentary, the name "John Edwards/England" and his
maker's mark were reconstructed. John Edwards and Company was in production
between 1847 and 1900 (Godden 1964: 231). The fragmentary maker's mark
i s similar t o t h a t used by the company between a b o u t 1880 and 1900
(Godden 1964: Figure 1451).
respectively. The pipe bowl fragment i s the stem side o f the bowl and bears
40
the raised l e t t e r s "TI' and "D". The bowl diameter, as reconstructed, i s 97
mm; the bowl i s 36.5 mm deep; the pipe stem hole i s 15 mm i n diameter;
and the ventral spur i s 7 mm long. A prominent flange i s v i s i b l e around
the hole opening o f the pipe stem fragment, which i s from the t i p of the
stem. The inside diameter o f the pipe stern hole on this specimen i s 18
mm. Mold seams on b o t h specimens have been p a r t i a l l y scraped.
13a, c )
Chinese Opium Containers (Figure --
Perhaps the most common Chinese a r t i f a c t type consists o f opium
container fragments. These small brass rectangular boxes a r e made from
a t l e a s t f i v e separate pieces soldered t o form the box and i t s l i d . The
-
sides of the lid'were made f r 0 r n . a brass sheet about 12.9 mm-wide; the
l i d i s embossed w i t h a Chinese s e a l . Three pieces o f brass make up the
container p o r t i o n of the box; a t h i n sheet base soldered t o a rectangular
Similar boxes have been recovered from other western U.S. Chinese
s i t e s , such as the Lovelock, Nevada, community. Here, some 264 opium
containers were recovered (Cal loway 1979: 320).
41
E
An unusual find i n S-14 are remnants o f bullet production from use o f
a two piece bullet mold. These include n o t only lead f o i l and melted lead
fragments b u t also an imperfect .44 or .45 caliber bullet show ng mold
half-lines and a b u t t o n s t i l l a t t a c h e d t o i t s sprue. The imperfect bullet
appears t o have been rejected because of prominent mold lines and uneven
diameter a s a r e s u l t o f not completely closing the mold and also from
lead pour lines reflecting p o u r i n g of the molten lead unevenly and t o o
slowly.
Chinese --
I n k Stone (Figure 13b)
A fragment o f the decorated end o f a greenish black Chinese ink stone
was recovered from S-14. Fortunately, the s t y l i s t i c a l l y diagnostic carved
end of the specimen is nearly complete. The stone i s a l i g h t olive gray
phylitic metamorphic rock t h a t was carved and ground t o form a depressed,
ovoid inking surface and reservoir, surrounded by a raised edge a b o u t 8.8
mm high a t the decorated end. The decoration depicts a f l o r a l design w i t h
leaves, stems, and buds or f r u i t s . The quality o f workmanship i s moderate,
w i t h carving s t r i a e visible with 5X magnification.
A complete specimen w i t h an apparently identical design was recovered
from the Lovelock Chinese s i t e (Brown and Rusco 1979: Figure 3 ) . This
inkstone was recovered i n a f i t t e d rosewood case and measured 98 mm by
128 mm.
43
VARIABILITY AND CHANGE IN THE CORTEZ CHINESE COMMUNITY
44
i n the study of the Cortez Overseas Chinese are suggested in the following
paragraphs.
45
"Principle o f Segmentation" (Crissman 1967), however, h a s been largely
observed i n urban Chinatowns and even then not i n a l l instances. Whether
o r not i t operated i n rural settlements o r can be observed i n the archaeological
record remains t o be t e s t e d . Elsewhere, Hardesty has suggested t h a t such
segmentation of the sojourner community m i g h t be observed i n census
enumerations t h a t show surnames clustering i n the same household o r neigh-
boring households and i n the occurrence o f h i g h a r t i f a c t s i m i l a r i t i e s among
neighboring households (Elston --
e t a1 1982; 254-255). P a r t of the Phase 3
project a t Cortez will be directed a t determining whether o r not such
segmentation exists i n the Cortez Overseas Chinese community.
The household is another archaeologically v i s i b l e u n i t t h a t i s
included i n the sojourner model. Both r e s t r i c t i v e immigration laws and the
sojourner's view t h a t residence i n the United States was only temporary
greatly c u t down the number o f females entering the New World. Far this
reason, the sojourner household was typically made up of a "mutilated" or
''separated'' family (Lee 1960: 203; Sung 1967: 155). Such families usually
included a f a t h e r living w i t h several other adult males in a household in
the United S t a t e s and a mother and offspring living i n China. Whether o r
not this sojourner household prevailed I n the Cortez d i s t r i c t can be tested
both archaeologically and t h r o u g h documentary sources. Again, Hardesty has
suggested this approach e l sewhere (El ston -
et -
a1 1982; 251 -253). Prel iminary
observations support the widespread occurrence of the sojourner household
type among the Overseas Chinese a t Cortez. Few women or children are l i s t e d
i n the available population census records, a n d there i s l i t t l e evidence of
women's o r c h i l d r e n ' s a r t i f a c t s i n the archaeological recgrd. More w o r k on
t h i s problem will be done d u r i n g Phase 3 o f the Cortez Rroject.
Acculturation
One way i n which adaptive change takes place i s through acculturation--
46
I
47
knives, and kitchen shears) continued t o be used in California, except
et -
study (Elston - a1 1982). Domestic a c t i v i t i e s associated w i t h food
preparation are perhaps l e a s t acculturated; tableware and food refuse, f o r
example, appear t o be quite t r a d i t i o n a l , To t h i s must be added gaming and
the opium complex, b o t h of which are traditional Chinese and which have been
retained by the Cortez Overseas Chinese. Domestic furnishings, however,
strongly r e f l e c t t h e process o f acculturation. Lamp chimneys, cast iron
stove p a r t s , and kerosene cans are examples from the archaeological record.
48
(1963) i n a paper on "Red Ochre" caches o f Michigan and has been recently
studied in more detail by Cavalli-Sforza and Feldman (1981). I n a very
general way, the process o f cultural d r i f t can be equated with s t y l i s t i c '
d r i f t by defining "style" a s non-adaptive or adaptively-neutral cultural
behavior (Dunnell 1978).
The likelihood t h a t s t y l i s t i c d r i f t can be invoked a s an explanation
from how closely the ecological theater approximates the "ideal" conditions
for d r i f t t o take place. --
Small size and isolation provide the greatest
opportunity for d r i f t . In population genetics, the opportunity f o r d r i f t t o
occur is estimated from the effective s i z e of the breeding population and
from the genetic turnover o f the population, usually measured w i t h the
amount of in-migration and out-migration (Lasker 1 9 6 0 ) , A somewhat
different approach is required f o r the assessment o f s t y l i s t i c d r i f t ,
mostly because of the d i f f e r e n t mechanism of transmission. The elements o f
s t y l e work t h r o u g h the social structure o f a population as a consequence of
the social learning mechanism f o r cultural behavior, in contrast t o the
breeding mechanism f o r genetic t r a i t s . Caval 1 i-Sforza and FeTdman ( 1 981 )
draw upon recent work on the diffusion of technological innovations (Rogers
and Schoemaker 1971) and on the epidemic spread of contagious diseases
(Bailey 1975) t o shed l i g h t on the nature o f cultural transmission.
A two stage process i s involved. The frequency o f social contacts i s the
key t o making individuals aware o f the cultural innovation, and role-models
are instrumental i n the acceptance of the innovation. What t h i s implies i s
t h a t the boundaries o f the populations upon which styl i s t i c d r i f t operates
are defined w i t h social c r i t e r i a t h a t control patterns o f social interaction
and prestige. Such populations might include kinship groups, ethnic groups,
peer gyoups, age mates, social classes, and the l i k e .
From t h i s discussion i t i s clear t h a t the "island structure" o f the
mining f r o n t i e r for purposes of studying styl i s t i c d r i f t i s considerably
49
more complex t h a n the patchiness of ore bodies. Working with preliminary
archaeological and historical data, we have defined the s e t o f cultural
"islands" l i s t e d in Table 3 , using geography, ethnicity, class patterns,
and occupational boundaries. The table also gives estimated values f o r the
size and r e l a t i v e isolation o f the islands, which allow some approximation
o f the opportunity for cultural d r i f t t o take place on each island. Size
has been estimated from 1900 population census records and from the number
o f archaeologically visible households t h a t could be associated w i t h the
islands. The household i s the social group within which the most frequent
interpersonal contact occurs and can, therefore, usually be treated as a
fundamental unit o f cultural transmission. An exception t o t h i s assumption
i s the boarding house a t Upper Cortez, which may have had a multi-ethnic
and mu1 ti-occupational composition t h a t reduced the intensity o f social
intercourse. Normally, however, a simple count of the number o f households
m a k i n g u p the island a t a given time period i s a good relative measure of
size.
Estimating isolation i s more d i f f i c u l t . Geographical distance i s
one dimension o f isolation, since i t d i r e c t l y a f f e c t s the frequency of
social contacts. A t the same time, however, the relatively small scale of
50
TABLE 3: A MODEL OF STYLISTIC DRIFT IN THE CORTEZ DISTRICT
Cultural Island -
Size Isolation Opportunity
Wenban’s Mansion Small High High
Lower Cortez Chinese Small High High
Lower Cortez I t a l i a n s Small Moderate Moderate
51
to the United States d u r i n g the 1 9 t h and early 2 0 t h centuries planned t o
return t o China as soon a s possible a n d , f o r t h i s reason, endeavored t o
remain l i n g u i s t i c a l l y and c u l t u r a l l y "pure" ( S u i 1952). I n c o n t r a s t , some
ethnic groups w i t h a common l i n g u i s t i c and cultural heritage are expected t o
have had osmotic boundaries and t o exchange ideas rather f r e e l y . Cornish,
Scottish, Canadians , and Anglo-Americans are such groups a t Cortez. Class
differences are also important. Wenban's mansion has been defined as a
cultural island i n the Cortez d i s t r i c t on t h i s basis; Wenban's social and
economic p o s i t i o n a s the owner and manager o f the largest mining operation
i n the d i s t r i c t d u r i n g the 19th century and his connections t o the urban
Victorian cultural t r a d i t i o n of the western United States should have
effectively isolated h i m and his family.
The opportunity f o r s t y l i s t i c d r i f t t o take place has then been
estimated f o r each island on the basis of s i z e and isolation. Of the 1 2
islands defined, only three appear t o have the ecological theaters
conducive t o the operation o f d r i f t . This model of s t y l i s t i c change i s , of
course, only preliminary and remains t o be tested. What the model implies
f o r the archaeological record i s , however, straightforward. I f d r i f t i s the
principal cause of cultural variation i n some c a s e s , then the three islands
w i t h the highest opportunity values should d i f f e r from the others i n a
number o f ways. First of a l l , the cultural differences among the three
should increase over time. The other islands are expected t o show no such
divergence. Ordering the households into a chronological sequence i s a
prerequisite f o r testing t h i s implication; the identification and dating of
households w i t h multiple occupations i s , however, an extremely d i f f i c u l t
task in the Cortez d i s t r i c t because of the short time periods involved.
A simple measure of similarity among the a r t i f a c t assemblages such as the
52
Brainerd-Robinson Index (Robinson 1951) can then be used t o compare differences
among households from one time period t o the next. Secondly, the cultural
differences among the households w i t h i n each of the three islands w i t h high
d r i f t opportunity values should decrease over time. That i s , the households
should become more and more a l i k e . The islands with lower opportunity values
are not expected t o show this trend.
53
AN ARCHAEOLOGICAL MODEL OF VICTORIANISM ON THE NEVADA MINING FRONTIER
-
The Classic Victorian Sphere.
The- small e l i t e of the Cortez d i s t r i c t , mostly forrned by the mine
54
L
owners and managers, are expected t o participate rather f u l l y in c l a s s i c
urban Victorian Culture. Perhaps the best example i s Sirneon Wenban, who
more o r less single-handedly develped the d i s t r i c t into one o f Nevada's
most successful. Wenban was a Victorian ''hero" in the Horatio Alger sense,
achieving economic success t h r o u g h hard work, s e l f - s a c r i f i c e , innovation,
and organization (Bancroft 1889). He was born i n County Kent, England,
i n 1824 and migrated w i t h his family t o the United States a t the age o f 4.
In 185 , Wenban moved t o the California goldfields t o seek his fortune and
superv sed a mill i n V i r g i n i a City, Nevada, in 1862 before going t o Cortez.
During his more than 30 years residence i n Cortez, Wenban played the role
-
The Sojourners Sphere.
I f the Cortez e l i t e participated f u l l y i n Classic Victorian Culture, a
large group o f Cortez laborers participated almost n o t a t all--the
immigrant Chinese. Sometime between 1869 and 1873 Sirneon Wenban replaced
the Cornish and Welsh miners previously employed in the d i s t r i c t w i t h the
" l e s s quarrelsome" and cheaper immigrant Chinese who were readily available
55
as a Source of labor following the completion of the Central Pacific
railroad. Unlike most immigrants t o the United States, the Chinese did not
intend t o stay. F o r this reason, the concept of l'sojourner''has been
applied to them (Sui 1952). The concept underlies their efforts to maintain
traditional values and lifestyles as much as p o s s i b l e , including the
formation o f geographically localized racial/cultural settlements ("China-
towns"), which minimized social interaction with Westerners, a1 lowed
retention of their language, and encouraged strong ethnocentric sentiments
about their homeland t o be expressed (Sui 1952:35-37). To the extent that
the acceptance o f Victorianism implies the transmission of a distinctive
set o f values, the Chinese community at Cortez was t h e most resistant of
all the ethnic groups; however, this does not imply that they accepted no
part of what Victorianism had to offer. Several years ago,Spier (1958b)
gathered documentary evidence that immigrant Chinese communities in 19th
century California most rapidly adopted western ways in the technological
sector whenever their American employer required that they do so or when they
engaged in occupations for which they had no previous experience. Additional
support f o r this idea has been found in the documentary and archaeological
records o f Chinese engaged in placer mining in Oregon (LaLande 1981) and in
charcoal making i n the Sierra Nevada (Elston - a1 1982). At Cortez, the
et -
immigrant Chinese hardrock miners and mill workers are expected to conform
t o the technological requirements of these occupations, along with Sime"on
the 1900 census lists several Chinese engaged in "store owner" and "store
clerk" occupations, which suggests that the Chinese community at Cortez may
have been integrated into a separate retailing and wholesaling system.
Another sector of immigrant Chinese culture which changed rather
dramatically i s household organization. The traditional Chinese patrilineal,
patrilocal, patriarchal and patrimonial kin groups (Freedman 1966) were
replaced in the New World by "sojourner households" made up mostly o f
multiple males (Sung 1967) and by ''sojourner communities" made up o f geo-
graphically localized sojourner households integrated by common surnames,
speech, and place o f origin (Crissman 1967; Weiss 1974). In the f a c e o f
this rather pervasive social modification is the shift toward the Victorian
"cult o f domesticity" with its nuclear family households. Demographic
data from the 1900 population census o f the Cortez district gives an idea
o f how strongly this key element of Victorian Culture was insidiously
invading the Sojourner household. In the Garrison Mine precinct, there is
no documentary evidence o f change. A17 of the Chinese households are
typical sojourner type--multiple males, listed as "partners.'' A similar
situation prevails in the Cortez precinct. Here, 82 percent o f all the
Chinese households were either single o r multiple males or females; however,
the remaining households were extended, including a husband and wife and
one o r more partners or boarders. In addition, all o f the Chinese households
in both precincts were censused in sequence, suggesting that they were
clustered into traditional sojourner neighborhoods.
57
All in a l l , the Cortez Chinese community was r e s i l i e n t i n i t s relations
with the c a r r i e r s o f Victorian Culture, changing t o accommodate the labor
demands o f management b u t maintaining a remarkable cultural i n t e g r i t y . The
strength of t h i s integrity i s i l l u s t r a t e d by a local story a b o u t the Chinese
cemetary a t Cortez. Sometime i n the 1920's, so the story goes, a long
caravan of Model T's arrived a t Cortez; t h e i r occupants exhumed the graves
and took the remains t o San Francisco, where they were t o be shipped back
t o China f o r f i n a l burial. These sojourners had returned home a t l a s t .
58
Contemporary newspaper accounts suggest another planned town in Mill Canyon
several miles away a t about the same time in the 7860's. The second ethnic
neighborhood a t Shoshone Wells is Chinese. As might be anticipated from
the e a r l i e r discussion, the archaeological record here suggests an e n t i r e l y
different interaction sphere--with clustered houses around walk-in wells
and an a r t i f a c t assemblage o f a Sojourner Culture. Probably dating between
3
--
earth ovens associated w i t h two o f the houses.
the Classic American Culture of the Post-World War Two period. The 1900
population census o f two precincts i n the d i s t r i c t suggests how the SFC i s
emerging. Perhaps most important i s the evidence t h a t ethnic neighborhoods
are breaking down. In b o t h the Garr son and Cortez precincts, multiple male
households included individuals from different ethnic o r i g i n s . One
59
household i n ' t h e Garrison precinct, for example, had s i x partners--two
I t a l i a n s , one Portuguese, one Swede, one Canadian and one Euroamerican.
I n addition, the census manuscripts show no tendency f o r households o f
the same ethnic o r i g i n t o be next t o one another.
The "insidious influence" of Victorianism i s everywhere apparent in the
emerging SFC b u t the Victorian themes have been reworked in d i s t i n c t i v e
ways. In t h e remainder o f t h i s paper, four such themes are considered i n
some detail : the c u l t of domesticity, conspicuous consumption , temperance,
and r a t i o n a l i t y and order.
60
from a variety of ethnic o r i g i n s . In addition, some o f the households in
b o t h precincts were boarding houses. All of these household organizations
r e f l e c t adaptation t o the male-dominated sex r a t i o s on the mining f r o n t i e r .
Conspicuous Consumption.
Another Victorian theme t h a t i s modified by the Frontier Syncretic
Cultune i s conspicuous consumption. In i t Classic expression, Victorian
Culture is associated w i t h large quantities o f material culture t h a t are
rapidly disposed o f and replaced w i t h "new" i t e m s . Nothing r e f l e c t s t h i s
value more than the development o f mass a d v e r t i s i n g t o market products on a
large scale d u r i n g the l a t e 1 9 t h and early 20th Centuries (Trachtenberg
1982: 135-139). Most important i s the s h i f t from the advertisement o f a
few luxury goods t o the advertisement o f "mass-produced goods for daily
61
Temperance
Temperance i s another Classic theme t h a t was reformed and then in-
corporated i n t o Syncretic Frontier Culture. Company store records and the
corporation values.
62
Rational i t y --
and Order
Finally, the key Victorian value of r a t i o n a l i t y -~
and order i s
modified and incorporated into the Syncretic Frontier Culture. Teague
(1980:140-145, 149-153) gives a n example from the Vekol Hills settlements
i n southern Arizona by arguing t h a t an apparent shift i n the building
arrangements of m i n i n g camps from r a t h e r haphazard t o a more r i g i d ,
l i n e a r plan over time r e f l e c t s the influence o f the Victorian Culture. Much
o f the same s h i f t i s v i s i b l e a t Cortez. The early " l i n e a r neighborhood"
a t Shoshone Wells, f o r example, and the ''planned" town a t Old Cortez seem
t o be expressions of a r a t h e r s t r o n g Victorian Culture i n the 1860's, which
then gave way t o the unplanned t r a d i t i o n a l communities of the immigrant
Chinese and other non-Anglo ethnic groups in the 1870's and 1880's; these
were, i n turn, replaced by the grid-like pattern of Upper Cortez d u r i n g the
e a r l y part of the 2 0 t h Century. A t the same time, the Victorian emphasis
upon order i s considerably attenuated i n the Cortez d i s t r i c t by idio-
syncracies o f individual households, a m i n i n g f r o n t i e r pattern noted by
Kelly (1978). Such idiosyncracy i s perhaps v i s i b l e i n the v a r i a b i l i t y of
architectural construction methods. W i t h i n a Victorian community, con-
struction methods a r e expected t o be rather homogeneous; f o r t h a t reason,
construction v a r i a b i l i t y a t Cortez should be low d u r i n g the "Victorian"
e a r l y period, h i g h during the Folk Culture period, and l o w d u r i n g the
more Victorian l a t e period. T h i s does not seem t o ' k the case, however.
The v a r i a b i l i t y of construction methods seems t o be highest d u r i n g the
Syncretic Frontier Culture, probably because o f reuse of early houses and
because o f a s t r e s s upon individual idiosyncracy. A b end of "idiosyncracy"
and I' order I' s , then, an underlying theme o f the trans t i on between
Victorianism and Classic American Culture a t Cortez.
63
CONCLUSIONS
I n conclusion, Victorianism on the rural mining f r o n t i e r has many
faces. The Cortez experience seems t o confirm what Trachtenberg ( 1 982:
70-100) has said about the role of ethnic minorities and the working
class i n b r i n g i n g about t h e demise of the Guided Age. Certainly, the
inherent opposition of many folk cultures t o urban, middle-class Anglo
values must have created social processes t h a t b r o u g h t a b o u t the transition
64
LITERATURE CITED
Bailey, N.T.J.
1975 -
The Mathematical of I n f e c t i o u s Diseases , Hafner ,
Theory -
New York.
Bancroft , H . H .
1889 H i s t o r y o f the Life o f Simeon Wenban: A Character Study,
.---I
7 -
The H i s t o r y Company, San Francisco.
Binford, L.
1963 I' 'Red Ochre' caches from the Michigan a r e a : a p o s s i b l e
o f Anthro-
c a s e of c u l t u r a l d r i f t , " Southwestern Journal -
POlOgy 19: 89-108.
Brown, B., and M . Rusco
1979 "The laundry a t N i n t h and Amherst," In Archaeological and
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e d i t e d by E . Hattori , M. Rusco, and 0. Tuohy, pp. 614-634,
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1978 "Charcoal making: a shady i n d u s t r y , " In Anthropological
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Volume 3, Chapter 1 2 , pp. 775-946, e d i t e d by W. G . Buckles.
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the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation, P u e b l o , Colorado.
Caldwell J.R.
1965 "Interaction s p h e r e s i n p r e h i s t o r y , " In Hopewellian Studies,
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I l l i n o i s - S t a t e Museum S c i e n t i f i c Papers, Volume 1 2 ,
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Calloway, C.
1979 "Metal a r t i f a c t s from N i n t h and Amherst," In Archaeological
-
and H i s t o r i c a lS t u d i e s a t N i n t h and Amherst, Lovelock, Nevada,
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