Here is an excerpt from the report entitled The Leetsdale Site,
Archaeological Data Recovery, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania:
“Site
36AL480, a stratified multi-component site along the Ohio River floodplain in
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, was impacted by the District’s construction of
Braddock Dam segments in Leetsdale Industrial Park. Data recovery excavations for mitigation were
undertaken concurrent with construction from 1999-2003. The site included a 19th century brickworks
overlying Native American occupations dating back about 6,800 years, discretely
preserved in floodplain deposits.
Geomorphology and regional environmental reconstruction played a
significant role in the excavations and site interpretation. No other site
of this type has been excavated under controlled conditions along the upper
Ohio River in Pennsylvania.
Site 36AL480
was characterized as a large, approximately 4.9-hectare (12-acre), multi-component,
stratified archaeological site on a terrace of the Ohio River. Archaeological components
included historic surface deposits from a former brick works and prehistoric components
radiocarbon dated from the Early Woodland (1000 B.C. – 200 A.D.) through the early
Middle Archaic (6,000 - 4,000 B.C.) periods. Depths of occupation surfaces
varied across the site, ranging from ground surface (historic brickworks
remains) to 4.7 m below ground surface. This site is the only recorded large
stratified site along the Upper Ohio River Valley in Pennsylvania having so
many intact occupations separated by sterile alluvial deposits. There have been
no modern large-scale site excavations of a similar stratified site in the
Upper Ohio Valley in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, or eastern Ohio.
The Middle Archaic period is the least understood cultural period in the Eastern United States. Since the site’s prehistoric components from the Archaic period have good integrity, Site 36AL480 has the potential to yield a great deal of new information on the Middle Archaic period in the region, as well as the eastern United States.”
If you’d like to read the entire report, you may request an electronic copy from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Pittsburgh District. Contact the District Public Affairs Office either by phone at (412)395-7500, or by email: lrp.webinquiries@usace.army.mil.
The Ohio-based CRM firms ASC Group, Inc. and
Hardlines Design Company conducted the Phase III archaeological investigations for this
project.
Brad
Lepper

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