Occurrence And Distribution Of Trace Elements In Snow Streams And Streambed Sediments Cape Krusenstern National Monument Alaska 2002 2003

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Publisher : DIANE Publishing
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File : 37 Pages
ISBN-13 : 9781428984349


Monthly Catalog Of United States Government Publications

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Genre : Government publications
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Release : 2004
File : 1004 Pages
ISBN-13 : MINN:31951P009639942


Occurrence And Distribution Of Trace Elements In Snow Streams And Streambed Sediments Cape Krusenstern National Monument Alaska 2002 2003

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Genre : Trace elements
Author : Timothy P. Brabets
Publisher :
Release : 2004
File : Pages
ISBN-13 : OCLC:57191798


Selected Organic Compounds And Trace Elements In Streambed Sediments And Fish Tissues Cook Inlet Basin Alaska

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Genre : Contaminated sediments
Author : S. A. Frenzel
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Release : 2000
File : 52 Pages
ISBN-13 : UOM:39015063162294


Priority Pollutant Trace Elements In Streambed Sediments Of The Cook Inlet Basin Alaska 1998 2000

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Genre : Contaminated sediments
Author : S. A. Frenzel
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Release : 2002
File : 24 Pages
ISBN-13 : OSU:32435069626554


Trace Elements And Organic Compounds In Streambed Sediment And Fish Tissue Of Coastal New England Streams 1998 99

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Genre : Electronic government information
Author : Ann Thomas Chalmers
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Release : 2002
File : 42 Pages
ISBN-13 : UOM:39015052301432


Archaeological Feature Identification Through Geochemical Analysis Of Arctic Sediments From The Cape Krusenstern National Monument Northwest Alaska

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Identification and interpretation of archaeological phenomena is typically based on visual cues and the physical presence of "something archaeological," such as a diagnostic artifact, landscape modification, or structural element. Yet many archaeological features, i.e. the discrete archaeological deposits related to past human behavior, lack clear indicators of human activity that provides clues to the feature's origin. At the Cape Krusenstern beach ridge complex, located in northwest Alaska, ambiguous features, that could be natural or anthropogenic (vegetation anomalies), or are of unknown cultural function (indeterminate), comprise 60% of the identified features at the complex. These ambiguous features represent a large gap in our understanding and interpretations of the occupation history of Cape Krusenstern and the Arctic. The goal of this thesis was to identify anthropogenic features and interpret the original human behaviors that contributed to their formation, through soil geochemical analysis. I sought to identify 1) which features are natural and which are anthropogenic; and 2) what behaviors created the cultural features (e.g. occupation of houses or caching of marine versus terrestrial food resources). I used photometric phosphates spot tests and inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) to geochemically characterize bulk sediment samples from ambiguous features. I then used a variety of statistics, including principal component and discriminant function analysis to identify patterning in elemental compositional data. I compared results to geochemical expectations for different types of cultural features based on prior research and my own analysis of cultural and non-cultural control samples. Analysis indicated that a single feature is natural, and the other tested features are anthropogenic features. However, the analysis did not aid in definitely identifying specific human behaviors (i.e. house/occupation versus storage activities) that could have created the ambiguous anthropogenic features. Broadly, food storage features showed slightly greater enrichment levels and less overall variation than house/occupation feature samples. Overall this thesis indicates that there are likely more house (7.9 to 10.2% increase) and food storage features (1.5 to 5.2% increase) present at the Cape Krusenstern beach ridge complex than previously thought. Increasing the number of house and food storage features suggests that the occupation history at the complex is potentially more intense than previously established. These results also suggest that geochemical analysis has potential use for feature identification at a broader landscape scale than previously performed in other archaeological applications of soil geochemistry. Last, this thesis shows there is potential in using previously collected bulk samples to gain in-depth information that can guide future work at the complex.

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Genre : Anthropogenic soils
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Publisher :
Release : 2020
File : 126 Pages
ISBN-13 : OCLC:1181944146