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Show MANUSCRIPT GUIDE FOR UTAH ARCHAEOLOGY UTAH ARCHAEOLOGY is a journal focusing on archaeological research within or relevant to Utah. Articles on either prehistoric or historic archaeological research are acceptable and both are encouraged. All articles must be factual technical writing with some archaeological application. The journal is sponsored by the Utah Statewide Archaeological Society (USAS), the Utah Professional Archaeological Council (UPAC), and the Utah Division of State History. The journal is published annually. Authors submitting manuscripts are requested to follow Society for American Archaeology (SAA) style in text references and bibliography (see October 1992 issue of American Antiquity). If you do not have access to a copy of the style guide, write to Kevin Jones requesting a photocopy. Authors are asked to submit one original and three copies of their manuscripts as all submitted articles will be reviewed by three readers. Reviewers will be selected on the basis of paper topic. Manuscripts should be double spaced with margins adequate to allow for comments and should include a short abstract if the manuscript is intended for an article rather than a report or a comment. Categories of papers are: (1) Articles (up to 30 pages in length) are synthetic; review or overview articles are especially encouraged); (2) Reports (shorter, usually less than 10 pages) are more descriptive; (3) Notes are short, descriptive papers on new (or old) data with a minimum of comparative or interpretive discussion; (4) Comments focus on issues of current interest in UTAH ARCHAEOLOGY or on previous publications. Comments on previously published works will be submitted to the author of that work for review and reply; and (5) Book Reviews. Authors are responsible for figure and photo production. Figures need to be publishable quality and should not exceed 6Vi inches by 8 inches in size (including caption). Use pressure sensitive transfer letters or KROY lettering for labels. Figure captions should be submitted on a separate sheet and clearly correlated to figures or photos. Please submit figures as computer generated graphics or as positive mechanical transfer prints (PMTs). If such a process is unavailable, submit figures as photo-ready drawings in black ink. Photos should be black and white glossy and 5 inches by 7 inches in size. Once the manuscript has been reviewed and accepted for publication, usually with revisions, authors will be asked to respond to the reviewer's comments. A hard copy of the revised manuscript should then be submitted to the editor with a computer disk in either WordPerfect or ASCII. The material will be copy edited, formatted, and returned to the author for final proofreading. Citation examples: Beck, Charlotte, and George T. Jones 1994 On-Site Artifact Analysis as an Alternative to Collection. American Antiquity 59:304-315. Janetski, Joel C. 1991 The Ute of Utah Lake. Anthropological Papers No. 116. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City. O'Connell, James F., Kristen Hawkes, and Nicholas Blurton-Jones 1991 Distribution of Refuse-Producing Activities at Hadza Residential Base Camps: Implications for Analyses of Archaeological Site Structure. In The Interpretation of Archaeological Spatial Patterning, edited by Ellen M. Kroll and T. Douglas Price, pp. 61-76. Plenum Press, New York. Subscriptions are available through membership in either USAS or UPAC or annual subscriptions. Individual issues are available through selected retail outlets throughout the state. These include the Utah Division of State History Bookstore, the Museum of Peoples and Cultures Publications Department, Fremont Indian State Park, and Edge of the Cedars Museum. UPAC members send manuscripts to: Kevin Jones, editor for UPAC Antiquities Section Utah Division of State History 300 Rio Grande Salt Lake City, UT 84101-1182 USAS members send manuscripts to: Robert B. Kohl Jennifer Jack-Dixie Chapter Utah Statewide Archaeological Society P.O. Box 1865 St. George, Utah 84771 UTAH ARCHAEOLOGY 1993 CONTENTS MESSAGE FROM THE EDITORS hi Kevin T. Jones and Robert B. Kohl ARTICLES THE PAST AS COMMODITY: CONSULTATION AND THE GREAT SALT LAKE SKELETONS 1 Steven R. Simms WHAT CAN GREAT BASIN ARCHAEOLOGISTS LEARN FROM THE STUDY OF SITE STRUCTURE? AN ETHNOARCHAEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE 7 James F. O 'Connell REPORTS ESTIMATING LOAD SIZE IN THE GREAT BASIN: DATA FROM CONICAL BURDEN BASKETS 27 K. Renee Barlow, Penny R. Henriksen and Duncan Metcalfe WHY SHOULD IT MATTER IF I TAKE ANOTHER POTSHERD? THE IMPACTS OF CONTEMPORARY ARTIFACT COLLECTING AT ANASAZI VILLAGES 37 William B. Fawcett FREMONT CORN AGRICULTURE: A PILOT STABLE CARBON ISOTOPE STUDY 49 Joan Brenner Coltrain INVESTIGATING THE SPATIAL STRUCTURE OF LITHIC SCATTER SITES FROM AN ETHNOARCHAEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE: EXAMPLES FROM UTAH AND NEVADA 57 Betsy L. Tipps SALVAGE EXCAVATIONS AT THE FIRE GUARD HEARTH 42WB54 WEBER COUNTY, UTAH 71 Mark E. Stuart RUNNING ANTELOPE: A PALEOINDIAN SITE IN NORTHERN UTAH 79 Dann J. Russell SOME ENIGMATIC STATIONS OF THE PONY EXPRESS AND OVERLAND STAGE BETWEEN SALT LAKE CITY AND NEVADA 87 David M. Jabusch and Susan C. Jabusch NOTES CULTURAL AFFILIATION AND AGE OF THE BROADBENT CACHE SITE 95 Alan R. Schroedl REVIEWS GAMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS VOLUME 1: GAMES OF CHANCE, AND GAMES OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS VOLUME 2: GAMES OF SKILL 101 Reviewed by Robert B. Kohl OF BLOOD AND STONE: INVESTIGATIONS INTO SOUTHEASTERN UTAH ARCHAIC 102 Reviewed by Robert B. Kohl THE SAGEBRUSH OCEAN: A NATURAL HISTORY OF THE GREAT BASIN 102 Reviewed by David M. Jabusch NORTHERN ANASAZI CERAMIC STYLE: A FIELD GUIDE FOR IDENTIFICATION 103 Reviewed by Mark Bond THE MAIN RIDGE COMMUNITY AT LOST CITY: VIRGIN ANASAZI ARCHITECTURE, CERAMICS, AND BURIALS 105 Reviewed by Douglas A. McFadden QUEST FOR THE ORIGINS OF THE FIRST AMERICANS 107 Reviewed by Roy Macpherson THE DESERT'S PAST: A NATURAL PREHISTORY OF THE GREAT BASIN 108 Reviewed by Dave N. Schmitt |