Two Ancient Springs in North Port, Sarasota County (original) (raw)

Archaeology of Silver Springs State Park, Marion County, Florida

2016

scattered chips 67 in (170.2 cm) deep, Unit F2 projectile point tip 1 well-made, Paleo? 67 in (170.2 cm) deep, Unit F2 end of spade-like tool 1 well-made, Paleo? 68-69 in (172.7-175.3 cm) deep, Units A3, A4, and F2 charcoal 68-69 in (172.7-175.3 cm) deep, Units A3, A4, and F2 scattered chips 133 Table 6. (Continued) Provenience Contents N. Comments 70 in (177.8 cm) deep, Unit A3 large utilized flake 70-74 in (177.8-188.0 cm) deep, Units A3, A4, B, F2 flint chips 70-74 in (177.8-188.0 cm) deep, Units A3, A4, B, F2 charcoal in (195.6 cm) deep, Unit F1 large utilized chunk of flint 81 in (205.7 cm) deep, Units F1 and F2 a few chips 88-93 in (223.5-236.2 cm) deep charcoal 88-93 in (223.5-236.2 cm) deep flint chips 90 in (228.6 cm) deep, Unit A1 point fragments, one base and one point missing base Clovis-like 89 in (226.1 cm) deep, Units A2 and E point bases Clovis-like 93 in (236.2 cm) deep, Unit B broken point fossiliferous chert 89-93 in (226.1-236.2 cm) deep, Units A1, A2, B, E, and F1 utilized flakes, 2 possible gravers 4 retouched, 5 with use-wear 89-90 in (226.1-228.6 cm) deep, Unit A1 and F2 sandstone abraders 89 in (226.1 cm) deep, Unit A1 chopping tool 89 in (226.1 cm) deep, Unit A3 rude, plano-convex side scraper 90 in (228.6 cm) deep, Unit A1 roughly pentagonal piece of fossil shell, possibly worked 90 in (228.6 cm) deep, Unit A1 possible worked horse tooth, or concretion 90 in (228.6 cm) deep, Unit A1 projectile point fragments (base and blade)

Florida's Deep Past: The Bioarchaeology of Little Salt Spring (8So18) and Its Place among Mortuary Ponds of the Archaic

Southeastern Archaeology, 2007

Little Salt Spring is a large sinkhole located near the western coast of Florida that has produced human remains dating to the Middle Archaic. Excavations spanning several decades have reinforced its place in Florida's prehistory, yet this is the first comprehensive analysis of skeletal remains produced from the site. The well-preserved remains consist primarily of femurs. Stature and femur dimensions are similar to another Archaic Florida population, Windover (8BR246). Little Salt Spring is one of several mortuary ponds bound temporally and geographically to the Archaic period in Florida. The similarities in use and interment style hint at the possibility of cultural continuity among the inhabitants of Florida's Archaic. Background Florida is synonymous with water. It is rimmed by the longest and most ecologically diverse coastline within the contiguous forty-eight states and continues to be shaped by wind and water. Today, more than half of Florida's 14 million residen...

Archaeological Testing at San Marcos Springs (41HY160) for the Texas Rivers Center, Hays County, Texas

Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State

Management Objectives This report describes the results of investigations undertaken to assess the archaeological resources at the Spring Lake Site, 41HY160, on the campus of Texas State University-San Marcos in Hays County, Texas. The Spring Lake Site, 41HY160, was recorded in the 1980s at the Aquarena Center, then a privately owned water park. In 1994 Texas State University-San Marcos purchased the Aquarena Center with the intention of converting it into an educational and research facility focused on rivers and springs in Texas. Eventually the University founded the River Systems Institute and it is now housed at the Texas River Center in the restored Hotel at the San Marcos Springs. In preparation for the construction planning for the Texas River Center, an archaeological testing project was undertaken in January 2001 and this report describes the results of that investigation. The primary goal of this project was to determine if intact and well-preserved archaeological materials were contained in the area planned for eventually construction. Conclusions and Recommendations The archaeological investigations were designed to assess the geological context and the nature of the preserved archaeological materials at the Spring Lake Site, 41HY160. An extensive geological coring effort extracted 22 cores from over 9 meters of alluvial sediments in the San Marcos River floodplain. These cores extended from the Hotel to beyond the football stadium. Five depositional units (A-E from older to younger) were identified, which dated from the Late Pleistocene to the Late Holocene, and all of these depositional units either contained preserved archaeological materials or were contemporary with know archaeological occupations in the immediate vicinity of Spring Lake. A single flake was recovered from geological Core E in Depostional Unit A channel gravels. Radiocarbon dates confirm sediment accumulation spanning the last ~12,000 radiocarbon years. Archaeological test units recovered a wide range of lithic tools, faunal remains, burned rock features and fl oral remains that have been identified as Middle and Late Archaic, and Late Prehistoric in age. Five intact burned rock features were excavated and documented. The careful excavation and archaeomagnetic analysis of burned rock from the cooking features demonstrates the presence of burned rock cooking pits and scattered burned rock hearths. These features were clearly constructed and used as cooking facilities

The Historical Archaeology of Looking for Angola at 8Ma103: Excavations and Public Outreach by the Manatee Mineral Spring, Manatee County, Florida

Report on the Public Anthropology Program Looking for Angola As an Update to 8Ma103, 2014

Report for Reflections of Manatee, Inc. on file with the Florida Master Site Files delineating historical archaeological and public outreach in the research on an early 19th-century maroon community on the Manatee River, Florida, known as Angola. The report focuses on 2004 to 2014 and makes the argument for material traces of Angola by the Manatee Mineral Spring. An update on the successful research is available as Uzi Baram 2021 "Recovering History by the Manatee Mineral Spring, Bradenton, Florida: Excavations and Laboratory Analysis" Report Prepared for Reflections of Manatee, Inc. - available at the Florida Master Site Files and https://ncf.academia.edu/UziBaram

MULTIDISCIPLINARY INVESTIGATIONS AT WEST WILLIAMS, 8HI509: AN ARCHAIC PERIOD ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE LOCATED WITHIN FLORIDA GAS TRANSMISSION COMPANY’S BAYSIDE LATERAL PIPELINE CORRIDOR, HILLSBOROUGH COUNTY, FLORIDA

Southeastern Archaeological Research, Inc, Gainesville, FL, 2002

This report presents the results of Phase III excavation and data recovery at 8HI509, also known as the West Williams site, located near the town of Thonotosassa in Hillsborough County, Florida. In total, 250 m2 were hand excavated and over 153,000 artifacts, more than 48,000 faunal remains, and 100 cultural features were recovered and documented.