Description

Book Synopsis

This archaeological study of the interactions between Western Shoshone families and Euro-American ranchers in the late nineteenth century helps fill the gap between what is known regarding Late Prehistoric foragers of the American West and ethnohistoric understanding of Native American peoples of the Great Basin.

Pottery Hill, an archaeological site located in Grass Valley, Nevada, northeast of the historic mining town of Austin, represents a small settlement of Native Americans who lived there in the late 1800s. The Grass Valley Shoshone, whose environment and traditional lifeways were disrupted by the arrival of miners and settlers in the 1860s, found work on the ranches and farms in the valley.

Archaeological fieldwork conducted in the 1970s investigated house remains, hearths, and artifacts. A recent analysis of these data, enhanced by the use of archival documents and oral history, provides new insights into the dynamics of late nineteenth-century life in central Nevada. The Pottery Hill Site addresses a critical period in the history of the Grass Valley Shoshone, who adopted and modified Euro-American artifacts and materials while maintaining important aspects of their traditional culture. It gives readers a deeper understanding of the effects of Euro-American settlement on the Shoshone, the history of the western United States, and the reciprocal impacts of cultural contact.



Trade Review

“Wells and Seelinger have done a remarkable job in producing one of the most thorough and authoritative accounts of historical-period archaeology in the Great Basin.”—David Hurst Thomas, American Museum of Natural History



Table of Contents
  • List of Figures
  • List of Tables
  • Acknowledgments
  • 1. Environmental, Ethnographic, and Historic Context
  • 2. Investigating the Pottery Hill Site
  • 3. Historic Period Houses in Grass Valley and the Great Basin
  • 4. Investigation of Pottery Hill 2 Houses
  • 5. Exterior Hearths
  • 6. House and Hearth Clusters and Activity Areas
  • 7. Classification and Description of Euro-American Artifacts from the Pottery Hill Grid
  • 8. The Chronology of the Shoshone Occupation at Pottery Hill
  • 9. Summary and Interpretations of Pottery Hill and the Grass Valley Historic Period
  • Appendix A. Buttons from Pottery Hill, by T. Beth Snyder
  • Appendix B. Fauna from Exterior Hearths at Pottery Hill, by Bryan Hockett
  • References

The Pottery Hill Site: A Historic Period Shoshone

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    A Paperback / softback by Helen Fairman Wells, Evelyn Seelinger

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      View other formats and editions of The Pottery Hill Site: A Historic Period Shoshone by Helen Fairman Wells

      Publisher: University of Utah Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 30/09/2023
      ISBN13: 9781647691349, 978-1647691349
      ISBN10: 1647691346

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This archaeological study of the interactions between Western Shoshone families and Euro-American ranchers in the late nineteenth century helps fill the gap between what is known regarding Late Prehistoric foragers of the American West and ethnohistoric understanding of Native American peoples of the Great Basin.

      Pottery Hill, an archaeological site located in Grass Valley, Nevada, northeast of the historic mining town of Austin, represents a small settlement of Native Americans who lived there in the late 1800s. The Grass Valley Shoshone, whose environment and traditional lifeways were disrupted by the arrival of miners and settlers in the 1860s, found work on the ranches and farms in the valley.

      Archaeological fieldwork conducted in the 1970s investigated house remains, hearths, and artifacts. A recent analysis of these data, enhanced by the use of archival documents and oral history, provides new insights into the dynamics of late nineteenth-century life in central Nevada. The Pottery Hill Site addresses a critical period in the history of the Grass Valley Shoshone, who adopted and modified Euro-American artifacts and materials while maintaining important aspects of their traditional culture. It gives readers a deeper understanding of the effects of Euro-American settlement on the Shoshone, the history of the western United States, and the reciprocal impacts of cultural contact.



      Trade Review

      “Wells and Seelinger have done a remarkable job in producing one of the most thorough and authoritative accounts of historical-period archaeology in the Great Basin.”—David Hurst Thomas, American Museum of Natural History



      Table of Contents
      • List of Figures
      • List of Tables
      • Acknowledgments
      • 1. Environmental, Ethnographic, and Historic Context
      • 2. Investigating the Pottery Hill Site
      • 3. Historic Period Houses in Grass Valley and the Great Basin
      • 4. Investigation of Pottery Hill 2 Houses
      • 5. Exterior Hearths
      • 6. House and Hearth Clusters and Activity Areas
      • 7. Classification and Description of Euro-American Artifacts from the Pottery Hill Grid
      • 8. The Chronology of the Shoshone Occupation at Pottery Hill
      • 9. Summary and Interpretations of Pottery Hill and the Grass Valley Historic Period
      • Appendix A. Buttons from Pottery Hill, by T. Beth Snyder
      • Appendix B. Fauna from Exterior Hearths at Pottery Hill, by Bryan Hockett
      • References

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