Alamance County Archaeological Survey Project, Alamance County, North Carolina

The Alamance County Archaeological Survey Project was jointly funded by a Certified Local Government grant from the U.S. Department of Interior of the National Park Service and Alamance County, North Carolina . The project was administered by the North Carolina Division of Archives and History. The...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: McManus, Jane Madeline, Long, Ann Marie
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: the Digital Archaeological Record
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.6067:XCV8RX9D8B_meta$v=1435080496267
Description
Summary:The Alamance County Archaeological Survey Project was jointly funded by a Certified Local Government grant from the U.S. Department of Interior of the National Park Service and Alamance County, North Carolina . The project was administered by the North Carolina Division of Archives and History. The primary objective of the project was to identify and assess previously unrecorded archaeological sites in Alamance County. The fieldwork began on January 28 and concluded on June 7, 1986. Of the 277,760 acre county, 1,030 acres were surveyed. In order to maximize site identification, survey efforts were concentrated in areas known by local informants to have produced artifacts. The Alamance County Archaeological Survey Project involved interviews with 42 local informants and collectors, identification and assessment of 65 previously unrecorded archaeological sites, and re-evaluation of two previously recorded sites, 31Am163 and 31Am168. A total of 102 separate prehistoric components and 15 historic components were identified. Many of the sites identified by archaeological survey may contain cultural deposits with sufficient contextual integrity to be considered potentially significant relative to National Register criteria.