Coal Bed Village: Test Excavations of a Major Ancestral Pueblo Site in Southeastern Utah
Keywords
coal bed village, Southeast Utah, archaeology
Abstract
Coal Bed Village (42SA920), located at the confluence of Coal Bed and Montezuma Canyons, is one of the largest Ancestral Pueblo sites in the state of Utah. The site was first documented by William Henry Jackson in 1875, but has never been systematically investigated. Rubble mounds covering the top, slope, and alluvial terrace below a small isolated mesita appear to be remnants from a large village probably dating to the A.D. 1200s (although surface ceramics suggest earlier use as well). Much of the site is currently threatened by erosion triggered by arroyo cutting from Montezuma Creek, leading to increased attention from archaeologists. In 2018, Brigham Young University and Weber State University held a joint field school at the site. In this presentation we discuss the preliminary results of our test excavations, surface collection, and aerial photogrammetry, all designed to better document the site and learn what is being lost to erosion.
Original Publication Citation
David T. Yoder and James R. Allison 2019 Coal Bed Village: Test Excavations of a Major Ancestral Pueblo Site in Southeastern Utah. Paper presented at the 84th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology, Albuquerque, New Mexico.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Yoder, David T. and Allison, James R., "Coal Bed Village: Test Excavations of a Major Ancestral Pueblo Site in Southeastern Utah" (2019). Faculty Publications. 6634.
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/facpub/6634
Document Type
Conference Paper
Publication Date
2019
Publisher
Society for American Archaeology
Language
English
College
Family, Home, and Social Sciences
Department
Anthropology
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