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Society for California Archaeology 2010 Annual Meeting

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32 <strong>Society</strong> <strong>for</strong> Cali<strong>for</strong>nia <strong>Archaeology</strong> <strong>Annual</strong> <strong>Meeting</strong> <strong>2010</strong><br />

Friday PM<br />

General Session 6 (De Anza South); 1:00 – 3:00 pm<br />

Recent Research in Historical <strong>Archaeology</strong><br />

Chair: Michael Sampson (Cali<strong>for</strong>nia State Parks)<br />

1:00 A Pirate Walks into a Church: Excavations at Chapman’s Mill, Mission San Gabriel<br />

John Dietler<br />

1:15 Living During a Difficult Time: A Comparison of Ethnohistoric, Bioarchaeological, and<br />

Archaeological Data during the Mission Period, Southern Cali<strong>for</strong>nia<br />

John Douglass and Patrick Stanton<br />

1:30 Allensworth: The Other Side of the Tracks<br />

Curt Duke<br />

1:45 The Burro Mine Camp: An Early 1900s Mining Camp<br />

Mark Howe<br />

2:00 San Timoteo Canyon and the Noble Family<br />

Judith Marvin and Shannon Carmack<br />

2:15 The Archaeological Enigma of the Sepulveda Adobe and Its Lesson <strong>for</strong> Investigating 19 th and<br />

20 th Century Residential Sites<br />

Michael Sampson<br />

2:30 The Casa de Estudillo: A Story Still Being Told Through Artifacts<br />

Erin M. Smith, Michael Sampson, and Rachel Ruston<br />

2:45 Munitions and Weapons at the Casa de Bandini/Cosmopolitan Hotel: Shot is Small, Heavy, and<br />

Round, and Un<strong>for</strong>tunately, It Travels Down<br />

Scott Wolf<br />

3:00 END<br />

Symposium 12 (Arlington); 1:30 – 4:00 pm<br />

Site Stewardship Programs: Where Have We Been and Where Will We Go?<br />

Organizer and Chair: Stephen Horne (Basin and Range Heritage Consultants)<br />

Site stewardship programs in Cali<strong>for</strong>nia and adjacent regions have developed from relatively<br />

simple volunteer programs to important, complex programs critical to site preservation.<br />

These programs span entire states and involve multiple agencies and now even include a<br />

program in Mexico through INAH. Many issues have surfaced as complexity and span have<br />

increased, including stable funding, fluctuating levels of agency support, disclosure of site<br />

in<strong>for</strong>mation, extent of professional supervision, retention, and varying levels of success in<br />

meeting volunteer expectations. Various programs have addressed these issues and others<br />

and <strong>for</strong>m models <strong>for</strong> standardization as such programs grow in the future.

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