Construction Damages a Prehistoric Caddo Indian Archaeological Site at the City of Gilmer's proposed Lake Gilmer, Upshur County, Texas

In March 1996, the archaeological work being conducted at the proposed Lake Gilmer was called to a halt by the archaeological contractor (Horizon Environmental Services of Austin, Texas) and the City of Gilmer long before the required archaeological mitigation of important prehistoric Caddo sites ha...

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Main Authors: Perttula, Timothy K., Nelson, Bo
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: SFA ScholarWorks 1997
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita/vol1997/iss1/30
https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2180&context=ita
id ftsfstateaustin:oai:scholarworks.sfasu.edu:ita-2180
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Stephen F. Austin State University, Texas: Scholar Works @ SFA
op_collection_id ftsfstateaustin
language unknown
topic American Southeast
Texas
Caddo
American Material Culture
American Studies
Anthropology
Archaeological Anthropology
Environmental Studies
History
History of Art
Architecture
and Archaeology
Other American Studies
Other Arts and Humanities
Other History of Art
United States History
spellingShingle American Southeast
Texas
Caddo
American Material Culture
American Studies
Anthropology
Archaeological Anthropology
Environmental Studies
History
History of Art
Architecture
and Archaeology
Other American Studies
Other Arts and Humanities
Other History of Art
United States History
Perttula, Timothy K.
Nelson, Bo
Construction Damages a Prehistoric Caddo Indian Archaeological Site at the City of Gilmer's proposed Lake Gilmer, Upshur County, Texas
topic_facet American Southeast
Texas
Caddo
American Material Culture
American Studies
Anthropology
Archaeological Anthropology
Environmental Studies
History
History of Art
Architecture
and Archaeology
Other American Studies
Other Arts and Humanities
Other History of Art
United States History
description In March 1996, the archaeological work being conducted at the proposed Lake Gilmer was called to a halt by the archaeological contractor (Horizon Environmental Services of Austin, Texas) and the City of Gilmer long before the required archaeological mitigation of important prehistoric Caddo sites had been completed. The reasons are still somewhat obscure. After a delay of more than 1.5 years in the completion of the archaeological investigations at the proposed Lake Gilmer, a federal and state-permitted reservoir in Northeast Texas, the Division of Antiquities Protection at the Texas Historical Commission has taken up the task of completing the archaeological work, following the legal dictates laid down by State Representative Bob Glaze during the last legislative session. This work will apparently concentrate on completing the investigations of 4JUR133, a large Middle (ca. A.D. 1200-1400) and Late Caddoan (ca. A.D. 1400- 1680) period habitation site. While the work at 41UR133 is long over-due, we believe that additional archaeological investigations are warranted at Lake Gilmer evaluation of the research significance of a recently discovered Caddo Indian site within the Lake Gilmer floodpool that has been damaged by reservoir construction-related activities, and evaluation of the research significance of the more than 30 archaeological sites discovered within the reservoir floodpool since 1996 by the Northeast Texas Archaeological Society. All of these sites must be considered by state law to be State Archeological Landmarks since they are on land owned by the City of Gilmer (a political subdivision), and they warrant further consideration. In this paper, we discuss site 41UR210 (the 852 Bridge site), a previously unreported and newly discovered prehistoric Caddo Indian site that has been damaged by construction activities associated with the proposed Lake Gilmer project in Upshur County, Texas. The site is on a small alluvial terrace adjacent to Kelsey Creek, on property owned by the City of Gilmer, and it was not recorded during the archeological survey completed for the project several years ago. Kelsey Creek is a tributary of Little Cypress Creek. This prehistoric Caddo Indian site has been damaged by construction-related activities associated with the construction of a new and higher bridge on FM 852 that will cross over the proposed Lake Gilmer. The site has been damaged by blading and bulldozing activities to obtain sand, and sediments have been removed to an unknown depth over an area more than 2 acres in size. Considerable amounts of prehistoric Caddoan vessel and pipe ceramic sherds have been exposed in this damaged area, and it is considered likely that prehistoric habitation features (middens and structural features)--as well as Caddo burial features--are present at the site, and may have already been damaged.
format Text
author Perttula, Timothy K.
Nelson, Bo
author_facet Perttula, Timothy K.
Nelson, Bo
author_sort Perttula, Timothy K.
title Construction Damages a Prehistoric Caddo Indian Archaeological Site at the City of Gilmer's proposed Lake Gilmer, Upshur County, Texas
title_short Construction Damages a Prehistoric Caddo Indian Archaeological Site at the City of Gilmer's proposed Lake Gilmer, Upshur County, Texas
title_full Construction Damages a Prehistoric Caddo Indian Archaeological Site at the City of Gilmer's proposed Lake Gilmer, Upshur County, Texas
title_fullStr Construction Damages a Prehistoric Caddo Indian Archaeological Site at the City of Gilmer's proposed Lake Gilmer, Upshur County, Texas
title_full_unstemmed Construction Damages a Prehistoric Caddo Indian Archaeological Site at the City of Gilmer's proposed Lake Gilmer, Upshur County, Texas
title_sort construction damages a prehistoric caddo indian archaeological site at the city of gilmer's proposed lake gilmer, upshur county, texas
publisher SFA ScholarWorks
publishDate 1997
url https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita/vol1997/iss1/30
https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2180&context=ita
long_lat ENVELOPE(-122.603,-122.603,56.817,56.817)
ENVELOPE(-93.038,-93.038,58.076,58.076)
ENVELOPE(-96.542,-96.542,56.040,56.040)
geographic Austin
Indian
Cypress Creek
Kelsey Creek
Kelsey
geographic_facet Austin
Indian
Cypress Creek
Kelsey Creek
Kelsey
genre Archeological Survey
genre_facet Archeological Survey
op_source Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State
op_relation https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita/vol1997/iss1/30
https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2180&context=ita
op_rights http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
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spelling ftsfstateaustin:oai:scholarworks.sfasu.edu:ita-2180 2023-05-15T14:17:50+02:00 Construction Damages a Prehistoric Caddo Indian Archaeological Site at the City of Gilmer's proposed Lake Gilmer, Upshur County, Texas Perttula, Timothy K. Nelson, Bo 1997-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita/vol1997/iss1/30 https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2180&context=ita unknown SFA ScholarWorks https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/ita/vol1997/iss1/30 https://scholarworks.sfasu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2180&context=ita http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ CC-BY Index of Texas Archaeology: Open Access Gray Literature from the Lone Star State American Southeast Texas Caddo American Material Culture American Studies Anthropology Archaeological Anthropology Environmental Studies History History of Art Architecture and Archaeology Other American Studies Other Arts and Humanities Other History of Art United States History text 1997 ftsfstateaustin 2022-03-24T20:26:10Z In March 1996, the archaeological work being conducted at the proposed Lake Gilmer was called to a halt by the archaeological contractor (Horizon Environmental Services of Austin, Texas) and the City of Gilmer long before the required archaeological mitigation of important prehistoric Caddo sites had been completed. The reasons are still somewhat obscure. After a delay of more than 1.5 years in the completion of the archaeological investigations at the proposed Lake Gilmer, a federal and state-permitted reservoir in Northeast Texas, the Division of Antiquities Protection at the Texas Historical Commission has taken up the task of completing the archaeological work, following the legal dictates laid down by State Representative Bob Glaze during the last legislative session. This work will apparently concentrate on completing the investigations of 4JUR133, a large Middle (ca. A.D. 1200-1400) and Late Caddoan (ca. A.D. 1400- 1680) period habitation site. While the work at 41UR133 is long over-due, we believe that additional archaeological investigations are warranted at Lake Gilmer evaluation of the research significance of a recently discovered Caddo Indian site within the Lake Gilmer floodpool that has been damaged by reservoir construction-related activities, and evaluation of the research significance of the more than 30 archaeological sites discovered within the reservoir floodpool since 1996 by the Northeast Texas Archaeological Society. All of these sites must be considered by state law to be State Archeological Landmarks since they are on land owned by the City of Gilmer (a political subdivision), and they warrant further consideration. In this paper, we discuss site 41UR210 (the 852 Bridge site), a previously unreported and newly discovered prehistoric Caddo Indian site that has been damaged by construction activities associated with the proposed Lake Gilmer project in Upshur County, Texas. The site is on a small alluvial terrace adjacent to Kelsey Creek, on property owned by the City of Gilmer, and it was not recorded during the archeological survey completed for the project several years ago. Kelsey Creek is a tributary of Little Cypress Creek. This prehistoric Caddo Indian site has been damaged by construction-related activities associated with the construction of a new and higher bridge on FM 852 that will cross over the proposed Lake Gilmer. The site has been damaged by blading and bulldozing activities to obtain sand, and sediments have been removed to an unknown depth over an area more than 2 acres in size. Considerable amounts of prehistoric Caddoan vessel and pipe ceramic sherds have been exposed in this damaged area, and it is considered likely that prehistoric habitation features (middens and structural features)--as well as Caddo burial features--are present at the site, and may have already been damaged. Text Archeological Survey Stephen F. Austin State University, Texas: Scholar Works @ SFA Austin Indian Cypress Creek ENVELOPE(-122.603,-122.603,56.817,56.817) Kelsey Creek ENVELOPE(-93.038,-93.038,58.076,58.076) Kelsey ENVELOPE(-96.542,-96.542,56.040,56.040)