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Show UTAH ARCHAEOLOGY A Publication of Utah Statewide Archaeological Society Utah Professional Archaeological Council Utah Division of State History UTAH ARCHAEOLOGY 1991 UTAH STATEWIDE ARCHAEOLOGICAL SOCIETY ( USAS) State Officers President, Margene Hackney Vice President, Richard Hansen Corresponding Secretary, Chanel Atwood Recording Secretary, Sharon Gant Treasurer, Kay Powell Chapter Presidents Alkidaa, Corinne Clark Castle Valley, Joan Taylor Central Utah, Corinne Springer Dixie- Jennifer Jack, Geralyn McEwen Moab, Jean Akens PromontorylTubaduka, Phil Prince Salt LakelDavis, Penny Larson Trail of the Ancients, K. C. Benedict Uinta Basin, Sue Mantle Utah County, Richard Hansen UTAH PROFESSIONAL ARCHAEOLOGICAL COUNCIL ( UPAC) President, Bruce Louthan Vice President for Ethics and Membership, Kevin T. Jones Vice President for Governmental AfSairs, Betsy Tipps Secretary, Julie Howard Treasurer, Lorna B. Billat Editor, Diana Christensen UTAH DIVISION OF STATE HISTORY Director, Max Evans State Archaeologist, David B. Madsen Assistant State Archaeologist, Kevin T. Jones UTAH ARCHAEOLOGY is an annual publication of USAS, UPAC and the Utah Division of State History. The purpose of this publication is to disseminate information relevant to archaeological research, both historic and prehistoric, in the state of Utah. Subscriptions are available through memberships in USAS or UPAC or for an annual fee of $ 10 through: Publications, Utah Division of State History, 300 Rio Grande, Salt Lake City, Utah, 84101. Authors interested in publishing should contact the editors for a manuscript guide. Editors: Joel C. Janetski, Museum of Peoples and Cultures ( UPAC) Robert B. Kohl ( USAS) Brigharn Young University Jennifer Jack- Dixie Chapter 105 Allen Hall P. O. Box 1865 Provo, UT 84602 St. George, UT 84771 Citations should follow Society of American Archaeology ( SAA) style ( See Style Guide American Antiquity 48: 429- 442). See example below. Copeland, James M., and Richard E. Fike 1988 Fluted Projectile Points in Utah. Utah Archaeology 1988 1 ( 1): 5- 28. ISSN 1040- 6549 The small images that mark the end of the articles in this volume of UTAH ARCHAEOLOGY are taken from pictographs and petroglyphs of Utah. The images in this edition are classified under the broad category quadrupeds. A quadruped is defined as a four- footed animal. Quadrupeds are often easily identified as deer, bison, horses, mountain sheep or goats, bears, dogs, cats of various types, etc. Frequently quadrupeds play an important, if not central, role in compositions as they do in the panel illustrated above, which is found in the San Rafael Reef in eastern- central Utah. Animals are often shown in a profile view, the artist occasionally illusbrated four- footed animals showing only two legs. The ease of identification of quadrupeds enables the classification of these images into this category even where four legs are not shown. There are, however, some images with four legs that escape identification. Images from diverse parts of the state have been selected for this edition to illustrate the variety of forms that are present within Utah. Steven J. Manning |