Back to
MWAC Publications
25. An Isolated Storage Vessel at Site 42SA20779
in Glen Canyon National Recreation Area: Adaptive Storage and Caching
Behavior in the Prehistoric Southwest.
Wolley, Anne M.
and Alan J. Osborn
This report documents the excavation and analysis of a large, isolated
ceramic vessel discovered in the spring of 1988 in the Hite Marina area of
Glen Canyon National Recreation Area, Utah Project #89-NA-051N. Several
college students from Western State college in Colorado (Dean Brian, Matt
How, Cathy Arvey, and Mike Donaldson) were hiking in the area when Dean
Brian discovered the pot. Aware of the possible significance of such a
find, Matt How immediately contaced Park Archeologist Kris Kincaid and
informed her of the vessel's location. Matt later returned with his
family, Micky and JoNell How, when archeologists Kincaid and Ralph Hartley
of the Midwest Archeological Center visited the site. An assessment of the
vessel, its location and condition resulted in plans for its removal by the
Midwest Archeological Center personnel scheduled to work in Glen Canyon
during the summer of 1988. The How family returned again with
archeologists to help excavate the pot from site 42SA20779 on June 23,
1988.
Such isolated artifacts have often been ignored by archeologists because
they were thought to provide little insight into the patterns of aboriginal
life. Conversely, analysis of this vessel was conducted within a framework
which allows the vessel to be placed within a context of adaptive storage
and caching behavior for the prehistoric Southwest. These results are
achieved by careful examination of the vessel itself, the environmental
context in which is was found, and the materials found in association with
the vessel during excavation. In addition, a review of the literature
concerning similar cache sites and ethnographic accounts of caching behavior,
as well as adaptive behavior theory, allow construction of an explanatory
framework within which this site, 42SA20779, and similar sites can be
interpreted.
|