Academic literature on the topic 'Parowan Valley'

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Journal articles on the topic "Parowan Valley"

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Smith, Ryan, and Jiawei Li. "Modeling elastic and inelastic pumping-induced deformation with incomplete water level records in Parowan Valley, Utah." Journal of Hydrology 601 (October 2021): 126654. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2021.126654.

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Raveggi, Patrizia. "Luciano Bianciardi e l’uva della collera." Studia Polensia 9, no. 1 (November 24, 2020): 175–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.32728/studpol/2020.09.01.08.

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Luciano Bianciardi pubblicò per testate diverse, negli anni tra il 1944 e il 1971, quasi mille articoli di natura estremamente varia, (elzeviri, rubrica delle lettere, critica televisiva, inchieste, cronache locali, pezzi sportivi), oltre ai suoi più noti romanzi e a opere di divulgazione storica dell’epopea risorgimentale: il tutto scritto nelle ore di riposo da quello che dal 1954 in avanti costituì il suo vero lavoro e fonte di reddito, un immane impegno traduttorio. Questo contributo individua nel percorso creativo dell’autore in parola, caratterizzato dalla tecnica del riuso di testi propri e altrui, da lui o tradotti o consultati per studio, una immagine balenatagli in mente durante il servizio militare, in guerra, sotto un bombardamento e da lui annotata poco a valle dell’evento in un suo Diario; tale immagine periodicamente riaffiora in altri scritti fino a fungere da conclusione del romanzo che lo avrebbe reso famoso.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Parowan Valley"

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Woods, Aaron R. "Distribution, Function, And Value Of Parowan Valley Projectile Points." Diss., CLICK HERE for online access, 2009. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd2905.pdf.

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Ure, Scott M. "Parowan Valley Potting Communities: Examining Technological Style in Fremont Snake Valley Corrugated Pottery." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2013. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/3993.

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Defining the Fremont archaeological culture has challenged archaeologists for decades. There is still considerable debate about the origins of the Fremont, their eventual demise, their genetic relationship to modern Native American tribes, and myriad other issues. In nearly a century of Fremont research, socio-political, economic, and religious complexity remain elusive subjects. Examining technological style, the manifestation of socially influenced choices during each step of production as a means of passive communication, is one useful avenue to examine Fremont material culture to uncover the social patterns they may, or may not contain. I examine whether or not technological style in Fremont Snake Valley corrugated pottery hold traces of social identity produced by Fremont potters living in the Parowan Valley, Utah.
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Hall, Molly Allison. "Parowan Valley Gaming Pieces and Insights into Fremont Social Organization." Diss., CLICK HERE for online access, 2008. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd2595.pdf.

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Watkins, Christopher N. "Parowan Pottery and Fremont Complexity: Late Formative Ceramic Production and Exchange." Address to the electronic version (viewed 2007 Sept. 2), 2006. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd1193.pdf.

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Stauffer, Sara E. "Parowan Fremont Faunal Exploitation: Resource Depression or Feasting?" BYU ScholarsArchive, 2012. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/3329.

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The faunal remains of large game such as mule deer, pronghorn, and mountain sheep are abundant at Fremont sites, as are jackrabbits and cottontails. The proportions of these species in Fremont faunal assemblages fluctuate through time. Explanations for these variations range from resource depression to communal activities. This thesis provides the results of the faunal analysis from three previously unreported sites. Paragonah (42IN43), Summit (42IN40), and Parowan (42IN100) are large Fremont sites in the Parowan Valley located 20 miles north of Cedar City in Utah. The purpose of this thesis is to determine if the variations in the faunal assemblage provide evidence for resource depression or feasting. I identify patterns or variation among the assemblages and determine that there is no evidence for resource depression. Evidence for feasting is present, indicating at least two possible feasting events occurred at the Paragonah site.
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Abo, Stephanie K. Y. "A Study of Fremont Snake Valley Black-on-gray Ceramics from Sites in Northern Utah and the Parowan Valley." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2020. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/8768.

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Archaeologists widely argue that Fremont potters from the Parowan Valley, in southwestern Utah, manufactured Snake Valley pottery. For my thesis, I examined Snake Valley Black-on-gray rim sherds using neutron activation analysis, oxidation analysis, metric data, and statistical methods. I compared my results on Snake Valley Black-on-gray sherds from three archaeological sites within the Parowan Valley (Paragonah, Parowan, and Evans Mound) to my results on Snake Valley Black-on-gray sherds recovered from three archaeological sites over 250 kilometers to the north (South Temple, Block 49, and Wolf Village). I argue that the Snake Valley Black-on-gray ceramics from the northern sites are tradewares selected from the Parowan Valley sites. My research expands on the limited knowledge of the painted variety of Snake Valley pottery; as well as provides insight into the overall understanding of Snake Valley Black-on-gray distribution among different geographical regions within the Fremont culture.
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Abo, Stephanie K. Y. "A Study of Freemont Snake Valley Black-on-gray Ceramics from Sites in Northern Utah and the Parowan Valley." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2020. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/8746.

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Archaeologists widely argue that Fremont potters from the Parowan Valley, in southwestern Utah, manufactured Snake Valley pottery. For my thesis, I examined Snake Valley Black-on-gray rim sherds using neutron activation analysis, oxidation analysis, metric data, and statistical methods. I compared my results on Snake Valley Black-on-gray sherds from three archaeological sites within the Parowan Valley (Paragonah, Parowan, and Evans Mound) to my results on Snake Valley Black-on-gray sherds recovered from three archaeological sites over 250 kilometers to the north (South Temple, Block 49, and Wolf Village). I argue that the Snake Valley Black-on-gray ceramics from the northern sites are tradewares selected from the Parowan Valley sites. My research expands on the limited knowledge of the painted variety of Snake Valley pottery; as well as provides insight into the overall understanding of Snake Valley Black-on-gray distribution among different geographical regions within the Fremont culture.
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Jardine, Cady B. "Fremont finery : exchange and distribution of turquoise and olivella ornaments in the Parowan Valley and beyond /." Diss., CLICK HERE for online access, 2007. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd2049.pdf.

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Jardine, Cady Brooke. "Fremont Finery: Exchange and Distribution of Turquoise and Olivella Ornaments in the Parowan Valley and Beyond." BYU ScholarsArchive, 2007. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1154.

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The Fremont tradition developed on the northern Colorado Plateau and eastern Great Basin between A.D. 1 and A.D. 1350 (Talbot 2000a). Research on exotics in the Fremont area, specifically turquoise and Olivella shell, has been sporadic until recently (Hughes and Bennyhoff 1986; McDonald 1994; Janetski 2002). In this thesis, I present new data on Olivella and turquoise artifacts found throughout the Fremont region, including the Parowan Valley sites, Nephi Mounds, and Kay's Cabin, as well as a spatial distribution of Olivella and turquoise in the Fremont area. I performed microprobe analysis on blue-green artifacts from Kay's Cabin and found most are turquoise, although other minerals including variscite, azurite, malachite, and possibly chrysocolla are also present. Also, various experimental methods were used to chemically characterize a turquoise artifact from Parowan Valley (see Appendix A). I analyzed over 350 Olivella artifacts (see Appendix B) and examined modern Olivella shells; therefore, I provide a discussion of the details and differences between the O. biplicata and O. dama species. Through testing Janetski's (2002) trade fair model, I readdress the question of whether or not Olivella and turquoise were distributed across the Fremont region via directional or down-the-line exchange. My research supports Janetski's model and shows that Fremont exotic exchange moved directionally, with Olivella and turquoise artifacts concentrated at central sites on the Fremont landscape. I also explore the possibility that the exchange of Olivella and turquoise to the Fremont area was conducted through different networks. It appears, based on high numbers of turquoise at certain sites and high frequencies of Olivella artifacts at other sites, that these ornaments were not traded together. I examine whether exotic artifacts were differentially distributed among sites in Parowan Valley and within the specific sites and I observed that Olivella and turquoise are most often associated with living areas.
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Books on the topic "Parowan Valley"

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Filipponio, Lorenzo. La struttura di parola dei dialetti della Valle del Reno: Profilo storico e analisi sperimentale. Bologna: A. Forni, 2012.

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Reconnaissance investigation of ground cracks along the western margin of Parowan Valley, Iron County, Utah. Utah Geological Survey, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.34191/ri-253.

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Book chapters on the topic "Parowan Valley"

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Woods, Aaron R., and Ryan P. Harrod. "A Line in the Sand." In Bioarchaeology of Frontiers and Borderlands, 212–30. University Press of Florida, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9781683400844.003.0010.

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This chapter features a bioarchaeological examination of traumatic injuries and pathological conditions on human skeletal remains from the Fremont and Virgin Branch Puebloan cultures of the pre-contact American Great Basin and Southwest. This study indicates that there were differences across the borders of these regions, which share a boundary along the southern portions of Utah and Nevada. The Fremont and Puebloan borders considered in this chapter include the boundary between Parowan Valley and the St. George Basin, and the Canyons of the Escalante River and the Kaiparowits Plateau, all in the state of Utah. Additional Ancestral Puebloan bioarchaeological data will be discussed from southern Nevada to help illustrate differences between Fremont and Ancestral Puebloan skeletons. The skeletal evidence allows us to infer that the borders between the Fremont and Virgin Branch Puebloans and the Fremont and the Kayenta Puebloans were very distinct, and results demonstrated that there was a much higher rate of trauma and pathology among the Fremont.
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