1,965 research outputs found
Interpreting Ritual in Ceramics of Late Mississippian Southern Illinois
This research aims to understand whether and how ritual manifests in ceramic objects dating to the Late Mississippian Period (ca. late 1200s A.D. to A.D. 1500) in southern Illinois. The study focuses on ritual phenomena that occurred at two village sites: Millstone Bluff (11Pp3) and Dillow’s Ridge (11U635). Millstone Bluff has been interpreted as a site of public ritual and unusual symbolic importance evidenced by its general location and topography, spatial organization, and distinctive rock art. Though Dillow’s Ridge was the locale for an inordinate level of lithic tool production, in other ways the site is understood to be typical of Mississippian villages for this region and time and unlikely to have accommodated large-scale public ritual activity. Through the analysis and comparison of ceramics from each site, this research seeks to identify the ceramic correlates of public ritual activity for this region and time. Statistical results suggest very little differentiation between the ceramic assemblages, suggesting the ritual activities that took place at either site may not have been substantially different from one another. Alternatively, the lack of differentiation may indicate ceramics do not play an active role in large-scale public ritual activity in this context
Recent Glacier Activity in the Taku Inlet Area, Southeastern Alaska
Contains results of author's investigations in this region (58° 30' N, 134° 04' W) during the Juneau Ice Field Research Project in 1953. An attempt was made to determine extent and dates of the late postglacial maxima of Taku and Norris Glaciers. Forest trimlines were studied from aerial photographs and in the field, and annual growth rings were counted. The maximum attained by the Norris Glacier in 1910, probably greater than any since about 1200 A.D., is apparently unique among Juneau Ice Field glaciers; it may represent, however, a minor advance in 1910 on a high level maintained since mid-18th century. Taku Glacier reached maximum in the mid-18th century, its height near the present terminus; advancing since about 1900, Taku may now have reached its present maximum
Integration through application
This project began, not with a question of what this thesis could do for me, but with one that would gratifyingly embody a more holistic purpose, What can this thesis do for someone else? Ultimately, the project was made so as to achieve certain focused intentions. It was handled through a hands-on experience with the pedagogical aspirations of learning more about architecture and the role of architects within that process. The project was therefore grounded in research of historical, theoretical and pedagogical precedents and determined to be as inspirational as informational. The project selected for the design/build process was a shelter along a recreation trail that linked the campus of the Woodward Resource Center to the town of Woodward, Iowa. The design was a master plan of the entire trail system including the ancillary spaces and its connection to the town, and the constructed space was a shelter
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